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Cited by 19 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Many species of birds prey on avian eggs, including many passerines, such as crows and jays (Goodwin ) and tyrant‐flycatchers and tanagers (França et al. ). Egyptian Vultures ( Neophron percnopterus ) that break Ostrich eggs by tossing gravel on them (Thouless et al.…”
Section: Terminology For Classifying Avian Dietsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many species of birds prey on avian eggs, including many passerines, such as crows and jays (Goodwin ) and tyrant‐flycatchers and tanagers (França et al. ). Egyptian Vultures ( Neophron percnopterus ) that break Ostrich eggs by tossing gravel on them (Thouless et al.…”
Section: Terminology For Classifying Avian Dietsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been largely established that nest failure due to predation or harsh climatic conditions is closely related to nest location, height, structure, shape and environment (Klomp 1970, Conway and Martin 2000, França et al 2009, Borges and Marini 2010, Brawn et al 2011). According to Mainwaring et al (2014), greater height of nests from the ground can influence positively or negatively nest predation rates, which would be higher if avian predators are the main risk, or lower in case of mammal predators.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Small birds, such as the Black-capped Chickadee (Parus atricapillus) also seem to be unable to consume quail eggs (Maier & DeGraaf 2001). Because birds seem to be important nest predators in the Cerrado (França & Marini 2009a, França et al 2009), it would be important to determine if some small Cerrado birds cannot consume large eggs which might explain the difference in predation rates between artificial and natural nests.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In forests, the main nest predators appear to be mammals, snakes and lizards (Robinson & Robinson 2001, Stake et al 2004, Robinson et al 2005. In contrast, in some areas in the Cerrado, birds were the main predators (França et al 2009). Overall, predation in the Cerrado habitats tended to increase throughout the reproductive period (Borges & Marini 2010), decrease during nest development (França & Marini 2009b), and differ between habitats and microhabitats (França & Marini 2009a, Borges & Marini 2010.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%