Published March 14, 2025 | Version v2
Dataset Open

Supplementary material for "Food availability affects parental anti-predator behaviour in red kites"

  • 1. Swiss Ornithological Institute, Sempach, Switzerland
  • 2. BOKU University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria
  • 3. Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Switzerland
  • 4. ZHAW Life Sciences und Facility Management, Wädenswil, Switzerland

Description

Abstract

Parental investment theory proposes two non-mutually exclusive hypotheses to explain variation in anti-predator behaviour in relation to the age of offspring: the “reproductive value of offspring” hypothesis and the “harm to offspring” hypothesis. The relative importance of the two factors underlying the hypotheses, reproductive value and harm, may change depending on environmental conditions such as food availability. To test the relative importance of the two hypotheses under different food conditions, we conducted a supplementary feeding experiment in red kite (Milvus milvus) breeding pairs and used a live eagle owl (Bubo bubo) as decoy nest predator to trigger anti-predator behaviour. We used time-to-capture in mist nets mounted next to the decoy predator as proxy for mobbing intensity. Under natural food conditions we found a nearly constant mobbing intensity throughout the entire nestling period. However, under food-enhanced conditions mobbing intensity was reduced in parents with young nestlings and increased in parents with old nestlings. These results suggest greater importance of the “reproductive value of offspring” hypothesis in situations of favourable food availability. Moreover, mobbing intensity depended on brood size and weather conditions. The results suggest that parental anti-predator investment increases with the reproductive value of the brood under favourable breeding conditions, but that this pattern is adjusted to the current context, including the vulnerability of the brood and environmental conditions.

Files

Sieder et al 2023 data no dives capture.csv

Files (61.0 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:b1405fa8732d0ec779985e4515f6a973
6.8 kB Preview Download
md5:b7d982b4da90714d5c0f1a0397692817
4.4 kB Preview Download
md5:9c930291ec039ae92663d8eba2340022
27.5 kB Preview Download
md5:73485380b557694df03122d09429d6e4
22.4 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
Journal article: 10.5281/zenodo.17456152 (DOI)
Journal article: 10.1002/jav.03475 (DOI)