Subject: Biology Book Title: Ecology and Behavior of Chickadees and Titmice
Ecology and Behavior of Chickadees and Titmice
an integrated approach
Otter, Ken A.
(Editor), Ecosystem Science & Management Program, University of Northern British Columbia, Canada
Print publication date: 2007
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2007
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-856999-2
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198569992.001.0001
Abstract:
Chickadees and titmice are among the most popular birds in North America, due in large part to their readiness to use bird feeders, to nest in urban gardens, and even to be trained to take food from people's hands. These attributes have also made them (and their Eurasian tit counterparts) perhaps the most intensively studied bird family in the world. Long-term research in Europe has yielded some of the most comprehensive data on the impact of global warming on the breeding ecology of birds. Chickadees have amongst the best-studied and most complex vocal behaviour of any bird species, displaying one of the closest analogies to human sentence structure in the animal kingdom in their familiar chick-a-dee call. The social dominance hierarchies commonly witnessed in the form of squabbling at winter feeders are some of most stable and closely studied, and have huge impacts on controlling the lives of these small birds. Their food-storing behaviour, and the brain and physiological mechanisms controlling this, has contributed significantly to our wider understanding of spatial orientation. In recent years, these birds have also been used as model species for investigating topics as diverse as inter-species hybridization, the impacts of forest fragmentation and complex systems of communication. In short, chickadees and titmice have contributed enormously to our understanding of a myriad of topics in ecology, behaviour, and psychology. Each chapter in this book reviews the latest advances in evolution and behavioural research that have been accomplished through the study of North American Parids, and compares and contrasts this literature with research on their Eurasian counterparts as well as other avian families.
CHAPTER 6. Phylogeography of chestnut-backed chickadees in western North America
CHAPTER 7. Behavioral aspects of chickadee hybridization
CHAPTER 8. Life in the small-bodied cavity-nester guild: Demography of sympatric mountain and black-capped chickadees within nest web communities under changing habitat conditions
CHAPTER 9. Social dominance and fitness in black-capped chickadees
CHAPTER 10. Chickadee vocal production and perception: An integrative approach to understanding acoustic communication
CHAPTER 11. The gargle call of black-capped chickadees: ontogeny, acoustic structure, population patterns, function, and processes leading to sharing of call characteristics
CHAPTER 12. How postdispersal social environment may influence acoustic variation in birdsong
CHAPTER 13. “Information” and the chick-a-dee call: Communicating with a complex vocal system
CHAPTER 14. Status signaling and communication networks in chickadees: Complex communication with a simple song