IBIGEO   22622
INSTITUTO DE BIO Y GEOCIENCIAS DEL NOA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
NESTING AND SOCIAL ROOSTING OF THE OCHRE-COLLARED PICULET (PICUMNUS TEMMINCKII) AND WHITE-BARRED PICULET (PICUMNUS CIRRATUS), AND IMPLICATIONS FOR THE EVOLUTION OF WOODPECKER (PICIDAE) BREEDING BIOLOGY
Autor/es:
BODRATI, ALEJANDRO; COCKLE, KRISTINA L; DI SALLO, FACUNDO G; FERREYRA, CARLOS; SERGIO A SALVADOR; LAMMERTINK, MARTJAN
Revista:
ORNITOLOGIA NEOTROPICAL
Editorial:
NEOTROPICAL ORNITHOLOGICAL SOC
Referencias:
Lugar: ALEMANIA; Año: 2015 vol. 26 p. 223 - 244
ISSN:
1075-4377
Resumen:
To understand the evolution of reproductive strategies and social behavior in woodpeckers(Picidae), it is useful to compare breeding biology between the two largest subfamilies: Picinae (truewoodpeckers) and Picumninae (piculets). The piculets include four species in the Old World (Sasia, Verreauxia,and Picumnus spp.) and a recent radiation of 25 Picumnus spp. in the Neotropics; however,information about their breeding biology is limited. We studied four nests and one roost of the Ochre-collaredPiculet (Picumnus temminckii) in the Atlantic Forest of Misiones and eight nests of the White-barredPiculet (Picumnus cirratus) in the Chaco region, of Argentina, and reviewed the published literature onother species of Picumnus. Cavities were excavated in dead branches and tree trunks. Entrance diameterswere 2.2 ± 0.2 cm (mean ± SE) for the Ochre-collared Piculet and 2.5 ± 0.1 cm for the White-barredPiculet. In both species, both parents excavated cavities, incubated eggs, fed nestlings, and maintainedthe cavity clean of feces. In the Ochre-collared Piculet, incubation lasted 13 days, on-bouts were 42 ± 4(± SE) min for females and 48 ± 7 min for males, and nest attentiveness was nearly 100% during incubationand the first 10 days after hatching. Nestling Ochre-collared Piculets hatched without feathers, theireyes and pin feathers opened on day 13, and they fledged on days 26 and 27. Nestlings of both specieswere fed ant larvae and other small prey. In Ochre-collared Piculets, the rate of food delivery (especiallyby the female) increased with nestling age. Females removed 71% and males 29% of fecal sacs. FledglingPicumnus have dark crowns and look like adult females, which is different from Sasia, Verreauxia,and most Picinae. Unlike Picinae, Picumnus parents roost together in their nest cavity before laying,throughout nesting, and (accompanied by their offspring) after fledging. They also roost in pairs or groupswhen not breeding. If Old World piculets also roost socially, this trait may reflect an ancestral condition ofthe woodpeckers.