2006
DOI: 10.3161/068.041.0201
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Breeding Performance of Blue Tits Cyanistes caeruleus ultramarinus in Relation to Habitat Richness of Oak Forest Patches in North-Eastern Algeria

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Cited by 18 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…ecosystems in central Europe which are characterised by a strong seasonality), whereas in Mediterranean-type environments, Lepidoptera assemblages are usually more diverse which can lead to multispecific outbreaks (Munguira 1995). In this regard, recent studies carried out in the Mediterranean region and other study sites have not found clear relationships between frass measures, parental feeding behaviour and nestling condition (Ziane et al 2006;Lambrechts et al 2008;Mägi et al 2009;Veen et al 2010). …”
Section: Caterpillar Phenology Datamentioning
confidence: 90%
“…ecosystems in central Europe which are characterised by a strong seasonality), whereas in Mediterranean-type environments, Lepidoptera assemblages are usually more diverse which can lead to multispecific outbreaks (Munguira 1995). In this regard, recent studies carried out in the Mediterranean region and other study sites have not found clear relationships between frass measures, parental feeding behaviour and nestling condition (Ziane et al 2006;Lambrechts et al 2008;Mägi et al 2009;Veen et al 2010). …”
Section: Caterpillar Phenology Datamentioning
confidence: 90%
“…This enables females (pairs) to optimise the reproductive investment in clutch size with respect to weather, food abundance and individual physiological condition (Perrins 1965, Pettifor et al 1988). The inter-habitat and inter-year differences in clutch size that clearly correspond to differences in the abundance of caterpillars suggests that the response of Blue Tits in both habitats of the study system is rather adaptive than non-adaptive (Pettifor et al 1988, Dhondt et al 1990, Thomas et al 2001, Postma & van Noordwijk 2005, Blondel et al 2006, Ziane et al 2006. The breeding success response to differences in food abundance may probably be wider in range than suggested by Blondel et al (2006) for Mediterranean populations of Blue Tits, as shown by the pattern of inter-year and inter-habitat variation in clutch size linked to variation in caterpillar availability in our study system.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In studies, where the quantity of caterpillars has been known for different habitats, the relation between clutch size and potential food varied. For example, in a recent study of Algerian Blue Tits, poor and rich habitats showed no difference in mean clutch size (Ziane et al 2006), whereas such differences existed in other Mediterranean systems (Lambrachts et al 1997). As our study system clearly shows adaptive differentiation of clutch size in response to the availability of caterpillars we predict that biologically significant consequences for chick condition and survival would be expected.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As has been shown, we could expect suboptimal conditions early or late in the season (before or after the peak in caterpillar abundance) and in territories with a higher proportion of Aleppo pines (where food is usually scarce). In this regard, the lack of alternative, profitable prey types to caterpillars strongly constrains tit breeding performance (Rytkonen and Krams 2003), while the presence of such alternative prey types is what guarantees the viability of southern marginal populations (Blondel et al 1991;Baňbura et al 1994;Ziane et al 2006;Pagani-Nuñez et al 2011). In line with this idea, our findings hint that diet specialization could operate as the main mechanism through which great tits avoid these habitat and temporal constraints, allowing them to increase or maintain their numbers under suboptimal conditions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%