Wb. Rendell et Nam. Verbeek, OLD NEST MATERIAL IN NEST BOXES OF TREE SWALLOWS - EFFECTS ON NEST-SITE CHOICE AND NEST-BUILDING, The Auk, 113(2), 1996, pp. 319-328
In natural cavities, old nest material accumulates with successive use
, thereby reducing the size of the cavity, and allowing the numbers of
certain haematophagous ectoparasites to increase. For this reason and
because researchers studying birds breeding in nest boxes typically r
emove old nests from boxes, the results of such studies have been ques
tioned. The accumulation of old nest material might affect nest-site s
election and nest building by hole-nesting birds, so we tested this hy
pothesis by manipulating the presence and amount of old nest material
in nest boxes of Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor). Our experiment a
lso allowed us to examine whether costs are incurred by females due to
nest building in terms of their subsequent reproductive output. When
a choice of boxes was available, swallows preferred empty and clean bo
xes, or those where the old material had been microwaved, over those w
ith old, untouched material. Clean boxes and those with microwaved mat
erial had more space inside, so our experiments support two hypotheses
: swallows avoid potentially high numbers of parasites in nests with o
ld material; or they prefer large cavities. Empty boxes affected nest
building. The mass and volume of nests built in clean boxes were great
er than for nests built on old material. Females did not add more feat
hers to the nest lining in boxes with old material as compared with cl
ean boxes. Correlation analyses suggested that females building large
nests began egg laying earlier in both years. Otherwise, there were no
associations between the sizes of nests built by females and subseque
nt reproductive output (e.g. clutch size) or nestling size (e.g. body-
condition index). Our results show that the common habit of removing o
ld nests from boxes can affect nest-site choice and nest-building beha
vior. Nest building does not influence reproductive output by Tree Swa
llows.