Thrush anvils are calcium source hotspots for many bird species

Artykuł - publikacja recenzowana


Tytuł
Thrush anvils are calcium source hotspots for many bird species
Odpowiedzialność
Zbigniew Kwieciński, Zuzanna M. Rosin, Łukasz Jankowiak, Tim H. Sparks, Piotr Tryjanowski
Twórcy
Sumy twórców
5 autorów
Punktacja publikacji
Osoba Dysc. Pc k m P U Pu Opis
0000-0002-3843-9778 6.4 70 1 5 31,30 0,4472 31,3040 Art.
Brak ORCID Brak deklaracji dyscypliny
0000-0002-3749-0619 Brak afiliacji do US
Gł. język publikacji
Angielski (English)
Data publikacji
2019
Objętość
0,5 (arkuszy wydawniczych), 8 (stron).
Identyfikator DOI
10.1093/biolinnean/blz126
Adres URL
https://academic.oup.com/biolinnean/article-abstract/128/3/603/5579382
Adres URL
https://academic.oup.com/biolinnean/pages/About 2020-01-23
Uwaga ogólna
Artykuł jest również dostępny w wersji elektronicznej, (konsorcjum, hybryda).
Uwaga ogólna
Published: 01 October 2019.
Uwaga ogólna
The Biological Journal of the Linnean Society is published online-only.
Cechy publikacji
  • Oryginalny artykuł naukowy
Słowa kluczowe
Czasopismo
Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
( ISSN 0024-4066 )
Kraj wydania: Wielka Brytania (Y Deyrnas Unedig)
Zeszyt: tom 128 zeszyt 20
Strony: 603-610
Pobierz opis jako:
BibTeX, RIS
Data zgłoszenia do bazy Publi
2020-01-17
PBN
Wyświetl
WorkId
23502

Abstrakt

en

AbstractCalcium is one of the most important elements determining reproductive success in birds, and snail shells are a well-known source of calcium for egg-laying females. In Europe, song thrushes, Turdus philomelos, break snails open at locations called anvils, eat the soft parts and leave the broken shells. Based on observational studies in 2011–2017 in western Poland, we showed that thrush anvils were visited by 54 other bird species (mainly smaller species) that collected the broken shell fragments. The frequency of visits to anvils differed among species and changed over the course of the breeding season, but anvils were especially used by females during the pre-laying period. Our study is the first description of such widespread exploitation of thrush anvils by other bird species, and we think that this phenomenon has been overlooked owing to the difficulties in recording anvils located, for example, on single small stones, stumps of felled trees and man-made objects such as glass bottles. We conclude that thrush anvils can be an important source of calcium for many bird species that adapt behaviourally to use these places. Hence, anvils should be recognized as localized hotspots for bird diversity.

Lista publikacji