Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18004
Título: Nesting biology of the yellow-olive flatbill (Tyrannidae, Elaninae) in Atlantic Forest Fragments in Brazil
Autor: Anciães, Marina
Aguilar, Thais Maya
Leite, Lemuel Olívio
Andrade, Renata Dornelas
Marini, Miguel Ângelo
Palavras-chave: Body Mass
Breeding Season
Clutch Size
Fledging
Fungus
Hatching
Incubation
Insectivore
Nest
Nest Predation
Nesting Behavior
Nesting Success
Nestling
Probability
Rainfall
Reproductive Biology
Songbird
Tropical Forest
Atlantic Forest
Belo Horizonte
Minas Gerais
Aves
Marasmius
Passeriformes
Tolmomyias Sulphurescens
Tyrannidae
Data do documento: 2012
Revista: Wilson Journal of Ornithology
É parte de: Volume 124, Número 3, Pags. 547-557
Abstract: The Yellow-olive Flatbill (Tolmomyias sulphurescens) is a small insectivorous passerine inhabiting Neotropic forests. Its breeding biology is poorly known despite its abundance and conspicuousness. We describe the nesting biology of Yellow-olive Flatbills from Atlantic Forest fragments in Belo Horizonte County, Minas Gerais State, southeastern Brazil. Eighty nests were monitored every 3-5 days from August to January between 1995 and 2000. Active nests were found from mid-September through late December with a peak from mid October through late November. First clutches were usually laid during the first rains, but prior to the main peak in annual rainfall. The Yellow-olive Flatbill builds closed, pencile nests on tree branches along streams or roads, principally of dark fungal (Marasmius sp.) fibers. Clutch size ranged from two to four white eggs. Incubation was irregular and hatching was asynchronous. Incubation and nestling periods were 20 and 23 days, respectively. Nesting success across all 5 years was 29 (mean among years = 31%, CI = 25-37%), and nest predation was the main cause of nest failure (49%). Mayfield estimates of nest survival were low (mean 26%, CI = 17-36%), and the probability of an egg to produce a fledgling was only 10%. Fledging success was 0.8 fledglings per breeding pair, and chicks fledged at 107% (CI = 106-108) of mean adult body mass. Our results do not support the purported pattern of long breeding seasons for tropical birds. The Yellow-olive Flatbill laid unusually large clutches, had lower nest survival, and greater fledgling productivity compared with other tropical passerines. © 2012 by the Wilson Ornithological Society.
DOI: 10.1676/09-072.1
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