Cover, not caging, influences chronic physiological stress in a ground-nesting bird

Predator exclosures (‘nest cages’) around nests are increasingly used to enhance hatching success of declining groundnesting birds. However, such exclosures are contentious and have been suggested to have detrimental effects on the species which they aim to protect. This study examines whether exclo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of avian biology Vol. 46; no. 5; pp. 482 - 488
Main Authors Tan, Laura X. L., Buchanan, Katherine L., Maguire, Grainne S., Weston, Michael A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.09.2015
Nordic Society Oikos
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
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Summary:Predator exclosures (‘nest cages’) around nests are increasingly used to enhance hatching success of declining groundnesting birds. However, such exclosures are contentious and have been suggested to have detrimental effects on the species which they aim to protect. This study examines whether exclosures increase physiological stress of incubating birds, a hitherto unrecognised and untested potential drawback of exclosures. Red-capped plover Charadrius ruficapillus hatching success was radically altered and significantly higher for nests with exclosures (96.2%) compared with those without (6.8%). Chronic physiological stress in parents (as measured by the heterophil/lymphocyte [H/L] ratio in blood) did not vary between nests with and without exclosures, or between the sexes. However the absence of vegetative cover at the nest site was associated with a 62.7% elevation in H/L ratio, indicating that incubating birds which place their nests in the open are subject to increased levels of chronic stress. The results from this study demonstrate the fundamental importance of predation for the nesting success of this species and confirm that chronic stress levels are not a detrimental side effect of exclosure use.
Bibliography:ArticleID:JAV625
the Hermon Slade Foundation
Ecology and Heritage Partners
ark:/67375/WNG-30P4JQ0K-0
Australian Bird Environment Fund (BOCA)
the M. A. Ingram Trust
Theiss Degremont Joint Venture and AquaSure
istex:9E9EDD035EDA0D1C1AC2E468815A5DEB35FB7E00
the Australian Government's Caring for our Country via BirdLife Australia's Beach-nesting Birds Program
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ISSN:0908-8857
1600-048X
DOI:10.1111/jav.00625