Experimental changes in food and ectoparasites affect dispersal timing in juvenile burrowing owls
Victoria Garcia, Courtney J. Conway, Christopher P. Nadeau

TL;DR
Juvenile burrowing owls delay dispersal when food is scarce or ectoparasites are high, while adults respond oppositely, showing how ecological conditions influence dispersal timing differently.
Contribution
The study experimentally shows how food and ectoparasites influence dispersal timing differently in juvenile and adult burrowing owls.
Findings
Juveniles delayed dispersal more than 2 weeks after parental departure if they did not receive food supplements during a low-food year.
Juveniles at nests treated for ectoparasites dispersed at a younger age compared to those at control nests.
Adults at nests treated for ectoparasites departed later than those at control nests.
Abstract
Natal dispersal is a key demographic trait that affects population dynamics, and intraspecific variation in dispersal affects gene flow among populations and source-sink dynamics. However, relatively little is known about the selective pressures and trade-offs that animals face when departing their natal area due to the logistical difficulties associated with monitoring animals during this critical life stage. We used a randomized block design to examine the selective pressure that influence dispersal timing in juvenile burrowing owls (Athene cunicularia) by experimentally altering both food and ectoparasites at 135 nests. We also examined the effects of local food abundance, ectoparasite loads, and parental departure on natal dispersal timing. Juvenile burrowing owls varied widely in natal dispersal timing, and phenotypic plasticity in dispersal timing was evident in juvenile owls’…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAvian ecology and behavior · Animal Behavior and Reproduction · Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies
