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European pied flycatcher

The European pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) is a small passerine bird in the Old World flycatcher family. One of the four species of Western Palearctic black-and-white flycatchers, it hybridizes to a limited extent with the collared flycatcher.[2] It breeds in most of Europe and across the Western Palearctic. It is migratory, wintering mainly in tropical Africa.[1][3] It usually builds its nests in holes on oak trees.[4] This species practices polygyny, usually bigamy, with the male travelling large distances to acquire a second mate. The male will mate with the secondary female and then return to the primary female in order to help with aspects of child rearing, such as feeding.[2][5]

European pied flycatcher
Adult male in Scotland
The song of a male Pied Flycatcher, recorded at Yarner Wood, Devon, England
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Muscicapidae
Genus: Ficedula
Species:
F. hypoleuca
Binomial name
Ficedula hypoleuca
(Pallas, 1764)
Range of F. hypoleuca
  Breeding
  Passage
  Non-breeding
European pied flycatchers, 2010 in Texel, Netherlands

The European pied flycatcher is mainly insectivorous, although its diet also includes other arthropods. This species commonly feeds on spiders, ants, bees and similar prey.[6]

The European pied flycatcher has a very large range and population size and so it is of least concern according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).[1]

Taxonomy

The European pied flycatcher is an Old World flycatcher, part of a family of insectivorous songbirds which typically feed by darting after insects.[7] The Latin word ficedula means "small fig-eating bird". The term hypoleuca comes from two Greek roots, hupo, "below", and leukos, "white".[3]

The species was described in Linnaeus's Fauna Svecica (1746), a work that was not binomial and that is therefore unavailable nomenclaturally. Later, in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae and the next edition of Fauna Svecica (1761), Linnaeus confounded this flycatcher with the Eurasian blackcap and the whinchat.[8] To this point, the European pied flycatcher still lacked a proper valid binominal name. The species was finally named as Motacilla hypoleuca by the German naturalist Peter Simon Pallas in 1764. However, he described this species anonymously in the appendix of a sales catalogue of the collection of Adriaan Vroeg, popularly known simply as the "Adumbratiunculae" among ornithologists.[9] The authorship of the Adumbratiunculae would later be attributed to Pallas.[10] Given the initial anonymity of the publication and the inferred authorship by external evidence, the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature advocates that Pallas's name should appear enclosed in square brackets in the species' name. Thus, the correct form of the scientific name of the European pied plycatcher is Ficedula hypoleuca ([Pallas], 1764).[8]

Ficedula hypoleuca currently has four recognized subspecies: the nominate F. h. hypoleuca ([Pallas], 1764), F. h. speculigera (Bonaparte, 1850), F. h. iberiae (Witherby, 1928), and F. h. tomensis (Johansen, 1916).[8] The subspecies F. h. muscipeta (Bechstein, 1792) is currently considered synonymous with F. h. hypoleuca, but could represent an actual distinct subspecies. The name F. h. atricapilla (Linnaeus, 1766) is a junior subjective synonym of F. h. hypoleuca; and the name F. h. sibirica Khakhlov, 1915 is invalid, the correct form being F. h. tomensis (Johansen, 1916).[8]

Description

 
Adult female in Slovenia.

This is a 12–13.5 centimetres (4.7–5.3 in) long bird. The breeding male is mainly black above and white below, with a large white wing patch, white tail sides and a small forehead patch. The Iberian subspecies iberiae (known as Iberian pied flycatcher) has a larger forehead patch and a pale rump. Non-breeding males, females and juveniles have the black replaced by a pale brown, and may be very difficult to distinguish from other Ficedula flycatchers, particularly the collared flycatcher, with which this species hybridizes to a limited extent.[11]

The bill is black, and has the broad but pointed shape typical of aerial insectivores. As well as taking insects in flight, this species hunts caterpillars amongst the oak foliage, and will take berries. It is therefore a much earlier spring migrant than the more aerial spotted flycatcher, and its loud rhythmic and melodious song is characteristic of oak woods in spring.

European pied flycatcher vocalization

They are birds of deciduous woodlands, parks and gardens, with a preference for oak trees. They build an open nest in a tree hole, and will readily adapt to an open-fronted nest box. 4–10 eggs are laid.[4]

The very similar Atlas pied flycatcher, of the mountains of north west Africa was formerly classed as subspecies of the European pied flycatcher.

Distribution and habitat

The European pied flycatcher has a very large range and population size, and is thus deemed to be of least concern by the IUCN. This species occupies areas of many different countries in Europe and northern Africa, also being present in the west Asian portion of Russia. More specifically, the nominate subspecies F. h. hypoleuca inhabits the UK, central Europe and Scandinavia, F. h. speculigera inhabits Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, F. h. iberiae inhabits in the Iberian Peninsula, and F. h. tomensis in eastern Europe and Russia.[8] The species is noted as a vagrant species in places in other countries in Africa and South Asia, such as Sudan and Afghanistan.[1] This flycatcher typically spends winter in tropical Africa.[3][8]

The European pied flycatcher is a terrestrial bird,[1] typically inhabiting open forests, woodlands, and towns. In 2005, the European population was listed to hold 3–7 million pairs.[3]

Mating systems

The European pied flycatcher predominately practices a mixed mating system of monogamy and polygyny. Their mating system has also been described as successive polygyny.[5] Within the latter system, the males leave their home territory once their primary mates lays their first eggs. Males then create a second territory, presumably in order to attract a secondary female to breed. Even when they succeed at acquiring a second mate, the males typically return to the first female to exclusively provide for her and her offspring.[2] Males will sometimes care for both mates if the nests of the primary and secondary female are close together. The male may also care for both mates once the offspring of the primary female have fledged. The male bird usually does not exceed two mates, practicing bigamy. Only two cases of trigyny had been observed.[12]

Gender difference in mating behavior

The male mating behavior has two key characteristics: desertion of the primary female and polyterritoriality. The males travel large distances, an average of 200–3,500 metres (660–11,480 ft), to find his second mate. After breeding with the secondary female, the males return to their first mate. The males of this species are polyterritorial; the males will acquire multiple nest sites to attract a female. Upon breeding with this first female, the male will procure more nesting sites, typically some distance from the site of the primary female, in order to attract a second female for mating. The males that have better success at polygyny are typically larger, older and more experienced at arriving earlier to the mating sites.[13]

 
Polygyny threshold model graph

The female behaviour has also been studied in depth, especially due to the fact that some females accept polygyny while others are able to maintain monogamous relationships. The first female in a polygynous relationship does not suffer much in comparison to females in monogamous situations. These primary females gain greater reproductive success because they are able to secure full-time help from the male once he returns from his search for a second mate. The second female, however, often suffers from polygyny. These females have 60% less offspring than females that are in a monogamous relationship.[14] These findings are consistent with the polygyny threshold model, which is depicted at the right. Additionally, the secondary female lays a smaller clutch which she is more likely to be able to rear on her own.

Another behavior that is relatively frequent in European pied flycatchers is the practice of extra-pair copulations (EPC). Thus, the male practicing EPC will have a group of offspring raised successfully without any parental investment on his part. The female may benefit from EPC if the second male is judged to have superior genes to the original male. Another benefit that EPC adds is that there is an increase in genetic variability. However, females are not typically very welcoming of EPC. A female that is being pursued for an EPC will either passively allow the male to copulate with her, or will resist it and risk injury due to the male's aggression.[15]

Breeding dispersal

In an experiment conducted from 1948 to 1964 in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, two hundred and fifty nest boxes were carefully recorded for their locations and then analyzed for their inhabitance.[16] The median breeding dispersal (the distance between successive nests) of the European pied flycatcher ranges from about 52–133 metres (171–436 ft), with the average distance between nest sites being about 45 metres (148 ft). This distance typically depended on the breeding density in each year. The study found little evidence to suggest a difference in breeding dispersal between years or between monogamous and polygynous males. As a result, the data for the separate categories could be combined. The breeding dispersal over longer distances could result in both mate fidelity as well as mate change, the latter of which occurs either while the previous mate is still alive, or following the death of the mate. The breeding dispersal distances of birds that survive more than three breeding seasons were studied, and the results showed that the site fidelity increased with more successive breeding attempts. The same long-term study also found that older European pied flycatchers, both male and female, were more likely to move shorter distances between breeding seasons than younger birds were. When mates were observed to re-establish their pair bond, they tended to occupy certain areas that were near the nest site established in the previous breeding season. In addition, female birds were less likely to return to a former breeding site following the death of, or divorce from, their former partner. When a pair divorces, the females have been observed to move greater distances away than the males. As a result, females that keep the same mates from year to year end up moving shorter distances for each mating period than those that divorce. Divorce has little influence on the likelihood of males moving away from their original nest site. The study found that males that keep the same mate do not move significantly smaller distances than males that divorce.[16]

Evolution of polygyny

Since most bird species exhibit monogamous mating behaviors, the polygynous behavior of the European pied flycatcher has sparked much research. There are three main hypotheses that seek to explain why females settle polygynously when it lowers their overall fitness and reproductive success compared to a monogamous relationship.[17]

"Sexy son" hypothesis

 
Adult male in Finland
 
Adult female in Finland

The first hypothesis is the "sexy son" hypothesis which asserts that although females experience an initial reproductive loss with their first generation, the reproductive success of the second generation compensates for the initial loss. The second generation of males is thought to be privileged because it will inherit the increased mating ability, or attractiveness, from their fathers and thus will have high success in procuring mates upon maturation. Since these "sexy sons" are projected to have heightened reproductive success, the secondary female's reproductive success in turn improves.[18] Some researchers, however, have refuted this theory, stating that offspring born to secondary females suffered from poor nutrition, which resulted in shorter tarsi and lower weights than the progeny of primary and monogamous females. These phenotypic traits contribute to lesser success in mate acquisition, rejecting the "sexy son" hypothesis.[12]

Deception hypothesis

The second hypothesis claims that deception from the male flycatcher explains a female's choice to mate with an already-mated male despite the relative decrease in reproductive success.[13] The deception arises from the polyterritoriality of the males, meaning that the males are able to deceive the females through the use of separate territories. This hypothesis attempts to describe why males have developed polyterritorial behavior. The typical long distances between nest sites suggest that males acquire multiple nest sites to facilitate the deception of the secondary female.[12] A study showed that females leave the male upon discovering that he is already mated, as long as she discovers this fact before laying season.[13] However, another experiment with European pied flycatchers in Norway produced results that refute the deception hypothesis.[19] The secondary female birds in their study raised larger clutches than primary females. The study also showed that deception is not an evolutionarily stable strategy for males, because secondary females would notice the frequent visits to the primary females and then elect to choose another mate. According to the deception hypothesis, already-mated males display polyterritorial behavior that increases their chances of acquiring another mate. Unmated males were shown to display mating behavior, consisting mostly of singing, at their nest site. On the other hand, already-mated males would need to disrupt their singing at their secondary territories in order to return to their primary nest. This can occur both before and after the time of their second mating.[20] As a result, it decreases the chance that females would be deceived, leading to an evolutionarily unstable strategy.[21]

Female aggression hypothesis

 
Adult female at the Kochelsee, Schlehdorf, Germany

The third hypothesis asserts that females settle for polygyny because it is hard to find unmated males.[19][22] This theory assumes that there is aggression between females to find mates and asserts that polyterritoriality actually helps to alleviate this aggression, allowing the second female a place to settle and breed peacefully.[23] Although the deception hypothesis suggests that males are more successful at farther secondary territories because they can hide their marital status, the female-female aggression suggests that males occupy distant secondary territories to reduce aggression between the primary and secondary females. Primary females display aggression and prevent other females from settling near the initial nest to ensure that they acquire the male parental care.[24] Primary females were seen in experiments to visit the second territory and behave aggressively towards the secondary female. The number of such visits decreased with increasing distance between the nests. It is also important for the primary female to be able to detect an intruding female as soon as possible, because the longer the intruder has been present in a territory, the more difficult it will be to evict the female. Female flycatchers are known to have the capacity to identify the songs of their own mates and check if they establish a second territory. The primary male was also shown to spend less time in the second territories during incubation periods than before they acquired a secondary mate, especially with greater distances between the two territories.[25][26]

Speciation by reinforcement

F. hypoleuca (pied flycatcher) and F. albicollis (collared flycatcher) are speciating from each other, providing evidence for speciation by reinforcement (selection against hybrid).[27] The two species diverged less than two million years ago, which is considered recent on the time scale of evolution.[28] Still, hybrids of the two species already suffer from low fertility [29][30] and metabolic dysfunction.[31] It was also believed that sexual selection causes reinforcement and pied flycatcher evolved different colouration in sympatry versus allopatry to prevent hybridization, though some evidence suggests heterospecific competition instead of reinforcement as the underlying mechanism.[32] Mating choice tests of the species find that females of both species choose conspecific males in sympatry, but heterospecific males in allopatry [33] (see conspecific song preference). The patterns could suggest mimicry, driven by interspecific competition; [34] however, song divergence has been detected that shows a similar pattern to the mating preferences.[35]

Parental care

 
Male flycatcher returning to nest

Studies were also done to examine the amount of contribution the male European pied flycatcher provided in parental care as well as why some females choose to mate with mated males.[36] When older and younger monogamous males were compared, there was no difference in feeding rate between each nest. When females were studied, scientists found that monogamous and primary females benefited significantly more from the male in terms of parental care than polygynous females did. The latter group could only partially compensate for the absence of a male, leading to secondary females and widows raising fewer offspring than the monogamous pairs did. In the study, differences in mates and the qualities of the territories were slight and therefore not considered, since they lead to no advantages for females to choose between the territories belonging to monogamous or already-mated males. The results of the study suggest that the males can control multiple territories and are thus able to deceive females into accepting polygyny, while the females do not have enough time to discover the marital status of the males.

In terms of male parental care to clutches, the rate of male incubation feeding was directly related to the physical condition of the males, and negatively correlated with the ambient temperature. Polygynously mated females also received far less feeds than monogamously mated females, despite having no difference in the food delivery rates by the male. The reduction in delivery rate to the polygynously mated females led to a negative effect on their incubation efficiency, because the females needed to spend more time away from the nest acquiring food. This also prolonged the incubation period when compared to monogamous females. The male feeding behavior is related to the reproductive value as represented by the nests, as well as to the costs and benefits of incubation feeding.[37]

Feeding

The main diet of the European pied flycatcher is insects. In fact, their name comes from their habit of catching flying insects, but they also catch insects or arthropods from tree trunks, branches, or from the ground.[38] Studies have found that the majority of food catches were made from the ground. It was also found that airborne prey were captured more during the early part of the season (May to June) than in the later part (August to September); the converse trend appeared in prey taken from trees. There are also many overlaps in the foraging techniques with the collared flycatcher, the spotted flycatcher, and the common redstart.[6][39]

Courtship feeding, or incubation feeding, occurs when the male feeds the female in the pairing, egglaying stages, and incubation. An interpretation of this behavior is that it strengthens the pair bond between mates.[40]

Diet

 
Eggs off Ficedula speculigera MHNT
 
Pied flycatcher chicks

The diet of the European pied flycatcher is composed nearly entirely of insects. One study analyzed the stomach contents of birds during the breeding season and found that ants, bees, wasps and beetles made up the main diet.[6] Ants made up approximately 25% of the diet.[41] Food given to nestlings include spiders, butterflies, moths, flies, mosquitoes, ants, bees, wasps, and beetles. For Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera, larvae appear to be consumed more than adult insects; the opposite is true for other insect orders.[39] There is also variation between the proportions of larvae and adult insects between different habitats. Nestlings were also found to consume more spiders, butterfly, and moth larvae, while adult flycatchers consume more ants.[6]

Status

It has on average decreased in population by 25% within the last 25 years. It has ceased to breed in several parts of its former range within Britain. It is a very rare and irregular breeder in Ireland, with only one or two pairs recorded as breeding in most years.[42] Records of its location can be found on that National Biodiversity Network.[43] In the Netherlands it have declined by 90% due to nestlings peaks mistiming.[44]

Lifecycle

 
Female in a nestbox in Finland
  • mid-September to mid-April: lives in sub Saharan Africa
  • mid April to end of May: migrates and arrives in countries such as the United Kingdom
  • June to August: breeding season, one brood only
  • August to mid September: flies back to sub Saharan Africa

Management and conservation

They breed in upland broadleaf woodland. This means that in Britain they are limited due to geography to the North and West. They prefer mature oak woodland, but also breed in mature upland ash and birch woods.

They require very high horizontal visibility - a low abundance of shrub and understorey, but with high proportion of moss and grass. Grazing needs to be managed to maintain this open character, but also allow the occasional replacement trees.

They will sometimes use mature open conifer woodland where natural tree holes occur. Generally they prefer trees that have tree holes, i.e. dead trees, or dead limbs on healthy trees. They also like lichens that grow on trees.

Grant funding for conservation

The Forestry Commission offers grants under a scheme called England's Woodland Improvement Grant (EWIG); as does Natural England's Environmental Stewardship Scheme.

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  40. ^ Lack, D. (1940). "Courtship feeding in birds". The Auk. 57 (2): 169–178. doi:10.2307/4078744. JSTOR 4078744.
  41. ^ Bibby, C.J.; R.E. Green (1980). "Foraging behaviour of migrant pied flycatchers, Ficedula hypoleuca, on temporary territories". Animal Ecology. 49 (2): 507–521. doi:10.2307/4260. JSTOR 4260.
  42. ^ Newton, S.F. "Rare Breeding Birds in Ireland in 2014 and 2015" Irish Birds Vol.10 p. 234
  43. ^ . NBN Gateway. Archived from the original on 29 October 2016. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  44. ^ Christiaan Both; Sandra Bouwhuis; C. M. Lessells; Marcel E. Visser (2006). "Climate change and population declines in a long-distance migratory bird" (PDF). Nature. 441 (7089): 81–83. Bibcode:2006Natur.441...81B. doi:10.1038/nature04539. PMID 16672969. S2CID 4414217.

External links

  • Avibase 2019-09-13 at the Wayback Machine
  • Oiseaux Images.
  • RSPB Website Description
  • Song of a Pied Flycatcher - a British Library sound recording
  • Male Pied Flycatcher Song - YouTube video filmed in northern Sweden in May

european, pied, flycatcher, ficedula, hypoleuca, small, passerine, bird, world, flycatcher, family, four, species, western, palearctic, black, white, flycatchers, hybridizes, limited, extent, with, collared, flycatcher, breeds, most, europe, across, western, p. The European pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca is a small passerine bird in the Old World flycatcher family One of the four species of Western Palearctic black and white flycatchers it hybridizes to a limited extent with the collared flycatcher 2 It breeds in most of Europe and across the Western Palearctic It is migratory wintering mainly in tropical Africa 1 3 It usually builds its nests in holes on oak trees 4 This species practices polygyny usually bigamy with the male travelling large distances to acquire a second mate The male will mate with the secondary female and then return to the primary female in order to help with aspects of child rearing such as feeding 2 5 European pied flycatcherAdult male in Scotland source source The song of a male Pied Flycatcher recorded at Yarner Wood Devon EnglandConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily MuscicapidaeGenus FicedulaSpecies F hypoleucaBinomial nameFicedula hypoleuca Pallas 1764 Range of F hypoleuca Breeding Passage Non breeding source source source source source source source source source source European pied flycatchers 2010 in Texel Netherlands The European pied flycatcher is mainly insectivorous although its diet also includes other arthropods This species commonly feeds on spiders ants bees and similar prey 6 The European pied flycatcher has a very large range and population size and so it is of least concern according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN 1 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Mating systems 4 1 Gender difference in mating behavior 4 2 Breeding dispersal 4 3 Evolution of polygyny 4 3 1 Sexy son hypothesis 4 3 2 Deception hypothesis 4 3 3 Female aggression hypothesis 4 4 Speciation by reinforcement 5 Parental care 6 Feeding 6 1 Diet 7 Status 7 1 Lifecycle 7 2 Management and conservation 7 2 1 Grant funding for conservation 8 References 9 External linksTaxonomy EditThe European pied flycatcher is an Old World flycatcher part of a family of insectivorous songbirds which typically feed by darting after insects 7 The Latin word ficedula means small fig eating bird The term hypoleuca comes from two Greek roots hupo below and leukos white 3 The species was described in Linnaeus s Fauna Svecica 1746 a work that was not binomial and that is therefore unavailable nomenclaturally Later in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae and the next edition of Fauna Svecica 1761 Linnaeus confounded this flycatcher with the Eurasian blackcap and the whinchat 8 To this point the European pied flycatcher still lacked a proper valid binominal name The species was finally named as Motacilla hypoleuca by the German naturalist Peter Simon Pallas in 1764 However he described this species anonymously in the appendix of a sales catalogue of the collection of Adriaan Vroeg popularly known simply as the Adumbratiunculae among ornithologists 9 The authorship of the Adumbratiunculae would later be attributed to Pallas 10 Given the initial anonymity of the publication and the inferred authorship by external evidence the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature advocates that Pallas s name should appear enclosed in square brackets in the species name Thus the correct form of the scientific name of the European pied plycatcher is Ficedula hypoleuca Pallas 1764 8 Ficedula hypoleuca currently has four recognized subspecies the nominate F h hypoleuca Pallas 1764 F h speculigera Bonaparte 1850 F h iberiae Witherby 1928 and F h tomensis Johansen 1916 8 The subspecies F h muscipeta Bechstein 1792 is currently considered synonymous with F h hypoleuca but could represent an actual distinct subspecies The name F h atricapilla Linnaeus 1766 is a junior subjective synonym of F h hypoleuca and the name F h sibirica Khakhlov 1915 is invalid the correct form being F h tomensis Johansen 1916 8 Description Edit Adult female in Slovenia This is a 12 13 5 centimetres 4 7 5 3 in long bird The breeding male is mainly black above and white below with a large white wing patch white tail sides and a small forehead patch The Iberian subspecies iberiae known as Iberian pied flycatcher has a larger forehead patch and a pale rump Non breeding males females and juveniles have the black replaced by a pale brown and may be very difficult to distinguish from other Ficedula flycatchers particularly the collared flycatcher with which this species hybridizes to a limited extent 11 The bill is black and has the broad but pointed shape typical of aerial insectivores As well as taking insects in flight this species hunts caterpillars amongst the oak foliage and will take berries It is therefore a much earlier spring migrant than the more aerial spotted flycatcher and its loud rhythmic and melodious song is characteristic of oak woods in spring source source European pied flycatcher vocalization They are birds of deciduous woodlands parks and gardens with a preference for oak trees They build an open nest in a tree hole and will readily adapt to an open fronted nest box 4 10 eggs are laid 4 The very similar Atlas pied flycatcher of the mountains of north west Africa was formerly classed as subspecies of the European pied flycatcher Distribution and habitat EditThe European pied flycatcher has a very large range and population size and is thus deemed to be of least concern by the IUCN This species occupies areas of many different countries in Europe and northern Africa also being present in the west Asian portion of Russia More specifically the nominate subspecies F h hypoleuca inhabits the UK central Europe and Scandinavia F h speculigera inhabits Morocco Algeria and Tunisia F h iberiae inhabits in the Iberian Peninsula and F h tomensis in eastern Europe and Russia 8 The species is noted as a vagrant species in places in other countries in Africa and South Asia such as Sudan and Afghanistan 1 This flycatcher typically spends winter in tropical Africa 3 8 The European pied flycatcher is a terrestrial bird 1 typically inhabiting open forests woodlands and towns In 2005 the European population was listed to hold 3 7 million pairs 3 Mating systems EditThe European pied flycatcher predominately practices a mixed mating system of monogamy and polygyny Their mating system has also been described as successive polygyny 5 Within the latter system the males leave their home territory once their primary mates lays their first eggs Males then create a second territory presumably in order to attract a secondary female to breed Even when they succeed at acquiring a second mate the males typically return to the first female to exclusively provide for her and her offspring 2 Males will sometimes care for both mates if the nests of the primary and secondary female are close together The male may also care for both mates once the offspring of the primary female have fledged The male bird usually does not exceed two mates practicing bigamy Only two cases of trigyny had been observed 12 Gender difference in mating behavior Edit The male mating behavior has two key characteristics desertion of the primary female and polyterritoriality The males travel large distances an average of 200 3 500 metres 660 11 480 ft to find his second mate After breeding with the secondary female the males return to their first mate The males of this species are polyterritorial the males will acquire multiple nest sites to attract a female Upon breeding with this first female the male will procure more nesting sites typically some distance from the site of the primary female in order to attract a second female for mating The males that have better success at polygyny are typically larger older and more experienced at arriving earlier to the mating sites 13 Polygyny threshold model graph The female behaviour has also been studied in depth especially due to the fact that some females accept polygyny while others are able to maintain monogamous relationships The first female in a polygynous relationship does not suffer much in comparison to females in monogamous situations These primary females gain greater reproductive success because they are able to secure full time help from the male once he returns from his search for a second mate The second female however often suffers from polygyny These females have 60 less offspring than females that are in a monogamous relationship 14 These findings are consistent with the polygyny threshold model which is depicted at the right Additionally the secondary female lays a smaller clutch which she is more likely to be able to rear on her own Another behavior that is relatively frequent in European pied flycatchers is the practice of extra pair copulations EPC Thus the male practicing EPC will have a group of offspring raised successfully without any parental investment on his part The female may benefit from EPC if the second male is judged to have superior genes to the original male Another benefit that EPC adds is that there is an increase in genetic variability However females are not typically very welcoming of EPC A female that is being pursued for an EPC will either passively allow the male to copulate with her or will resist it and risk injury due to the male s aggression 15 Breeding dispersal Edit In an experiment conducted from 1948 to 1964 in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire two hundred and fifty nest boxes were carefully recorded for their locations and then analyzed for their inhabitance 16 The median breeding dispersal the distance between successive nests of the European pied flycatcher ranges from about 52 133 metres 171 436 ft with the average distance between nest sites being about 45 metres 148 ft This distance typically depended on the breeding density in each year The study found little evidence to suggest a difference in breeding dispersal between years or between monogamous and polygynous males As a result the data for the separate categories could be combined The breeding dispersal over longer distances could result in both mate fidelity as well as mate change the latter of which occurs either while the previous mate is still alive or following the death of the mate The breeding dispersal distances of birds that survive more than three breeding seasons were studied and the results showed that the site fidelity increased with more successive breeding attempts The same long term study also found that older European pied flycatchers both male and female were more likely to move shorter distances between breeding seasons than younger birds were When mates were observed to re establish their pair bond they tended to occupy certain areas that were near the nest site established in the previous breeding season In addition female birds were less likely to return to a former breeding site following the death of or divorce from their former partner When a pair divorces the females have been observed to move greater distances away than the males As a result females that keep the same mates from year to year end up moving shorter distances for each mating period than those that divorce Divorce has little influence on the likelihood of males moving away from their original nest site The study found that males that keep the same mate do not move significantly smaller distances than males that divorce 16 Evolution of polygyny Edit Since most bird species exhibit monogamous mating behaviors the polygynous behavior of the European pied flycatcher has sparked much research There are three main hypotheses that seek to explain why females settle polygynously when it lowers their overall fitness and reproductive success compared to a monogamous relationship 17 Sexy son hypothesis Edit Adult male in Finland Adult female in Finland The first hypothesis is the sexy son hypothesis which asserts that although females experience an initial reproductive loss with their first generation the reproductive success of the second generation compensates for the initial loss The second generation of males is thought to be privileged because it will inherit the increased mating ability or attractiveness from their fathers and thus will have high success in procuring mates upon maturation Since these sexy sons are projected to have heightened reproductive success the secondary female s reproductive success in turn improves 18 Some researchers however have refuted this theory stating that offspring born to secondary females suffered from poor nutrition which resulted in shorter tarsi and lower weights than the progeny of primary and monogamous females These phenotypic traits contribute to lesser success in mate acquisition rejecting the sexy son hypothesis 12 Deception hypothesis Edit The second hypothesis claims that deception from the male flycatcher explains a female s choice to mate with an already mated male despite the relative decrease in reproductive success 13 The deception arises from the polyterritoriality of the males meaning that the males are able to deceive the females through the use of separate territories This hypothesis attempts to describe why males have developed polyterritorial behavior The typical long distances between nest sites suggest that males acquire multiple nest sites to facilitate the deception of the secondary female 12 A study showed that females leave the male upon discovering that he is already mated as long as she discovers this fact before laying season 13 However another experiment with European pied flycatchers in Norway produced results that refute the deception hypothesis 19 The secondary female birds in their study raised larger clutches than primary females The study also showed that deception is not an evolutionarily stable strategy for males because secondary females would notice the frequent visits to the primary females and then elect to choose another mate According to the deception hypothesis already mated males display polyterritorial behavior that increases their chances of acquiring another mate Unmated males were shown to display mating behavior consisting mostly of singing at their nest site On the other hand already mated males would need to disrupt their singing at their secondary territories in order to return to their primary nest This can occur both before and after the time of their second mating 20 As a result it decreases the chance that females would be deceived leading to an evolutionarily unstable strategy 21 Female aggression hypothesis Edit Adult female at the Kochelsee Schlehdorf Germany The third hypothesis asserts that females settle for polygyny because it is hard to find unmated males 19 22 This theory assumes that there is aggression between females to find mates and asserts that polyterritoriality actually helps to alleviate this aggression allowing the second female a place to settle and breed peacefully 23 Although the deception hypothesis suggests that males are more successful at farther secondary territories because they can hide their marital status the female female aggression suggests that males occupy distant secondary territories to reduce aggression between the primary and secondary females Primary females display aggression and prevent other females from settling near the initial nest to ensure that they acquire the male parental care 24 Primary females were seen in experiments to visit the second territory and behave aggressively towards the secondary female The number of such visits decreased with increasing distance between the nests It is also important for the primary female to be able to detect an intruding female as soon as possible because the longer the intruder has been present in a territory the more difficult it will be to evict the female Female flycatchers are known to have the capacity to identify the songs of their own mates and check if they establish a second territory The primary male was also shown to spend less time in the second territories during incubation periods than before they acquired a secondary mate especially with greater distances between the two territories 25 26 Speciation by reinforcement Edit F hypoleuca pied flycatcher and F albicollis collared flycatcher are speciating from each other providing evidence for speciation by reinforcement selection against hybrid 27 The two species diverged less than two million years ago which is considered recent on the time scale of evolution 28 Still hybrids of the two species already suffer from low fertility 29 30 and metabolic dysfunction 31 It was also believed that sexual selection causes reinforcement and pied flycatcher evolved different colouration in sympatry versus allopatry to prevent hybridization though some evidence suggests heterospecific competition instead of reinforcement as the underlying mechanism 32 Mating choice tests of the species find that females of both species choose conspecific males in sympatry but heterospecific males in allopatry 33 see conspecific song preference The patterns could suggest mimicry driven by interspecific competition 34 however song divergence has been detected that shows a similar pattern to the mating preferences 35 Parental care Edit Male flycatcher returning to nest Studies were also done to examine the amount of contribution the male European pied flycatcher provided in parental care as well as why some females choose to mate with mated males 36 When older and younger monogamous males were compared there was no difference in feeding rate between each nest When females were studied scientists found that monogamous and primary females benefited significantly more from the male in terms of parental care than polygynous females did The latter group could only partially compensate for the absence of a male leading to secondary females and widows raising fewer offspring than the monogamous pairs did In the study differences in mates and the qualities of the territories were slight and therefore not considered since they lead to no advantages for females to choose between the territories belonging to monogamous or already mated males The results of the study suggest that the males can control multiple territories and are thus able to deceive females into accepting polygyny while the females do not have enough time to discover the marital status of the males In terms of male parental care to clutches the rate of male incubation feeding was directly related to the physical condition of the males and negatively correlated with the ambient temperature Polygynously mated females also received far less feeds than monogamously mated females despite having no difference in the food delivery rates by the male The reduction in delivery rate to the polygynously mated females led to a negative effect on their incubation efficiency because the females needed to spend more time away from the nest acquiring food This also prolonged the incubation period when compared to monogamous females The male feeding behavior is related to the reproductive value as represented by the nests as well as to the costs and benefits of incubation feeding 37 Feeding EditThe main diet of the European pied flycatcher is insects In fact their name comes from their habit of catching flying insects but they also catch insects or arthropods from tree trunks branches or from the ground 38 Studies have found that the majority of food catches were made from the ground It was also found that airborne prey were captured more during the early part of the season May to June than in the later part August to September the converse trend appeared in prey taken from trees There are also many overlaps in the foraging techniques with the collared flycatcher the spotted flycatcher and the common redstart 6 39 Courtship feeding or incubation feeding occurs when the male feeds the female in the pairing egglaying stages and incubation An interpretation of this behavior is that it strengthens the pair bond between mates 40 Diet Edit Eggs off Ficedula speculigera MHNT Pied flycatcher chicks The diet of the European pied flycatcher is composed nearly entirely of insects One study analyzed the stomach contents of birds during the breeding season and found that ants bees wasps and beetles made up the main diet 6 Ants made up approximately 25 of the diet 41 Food given to nestlings include spiders butterflies moths flies mosquitoes ants bees wasps and beetles For Lepidoptera and Hymenoptera larvae appear to be consumed more than adult insects the opposite is true for other insect orders 39 There is also variation between the proportions of larvae and adult insects between different habitats Nestlings were also found to consume more spiders butterfly and moth larvae while adult flycatchers consume more ants 6 Status EditIt has on average decreased in population by 25 within the last 25 years It has ceased to breed in several parts of its former range within Britain It is a very rare and irregular breeder in Ireland with only one or two pairs recorded as breeding in most years 42 Records of its location can be found on that National Biodiversity Network 43 In the Netherlands it have declined by 90 due to nestlings peaks mistiming 44 Lifecycle Edit Female in a nestbox in Finland mid September to mid April lives in sub Saharan Africa mid April to end of May migrates and arrives in countries such as the United Kingdom June to August breeding season one brood only August to mid September flies back to sub Saharan AfricaManagement and conservation Edit They breed in upland broadleaf woodland This means that in Britain they are limited due to geography to the North and West They prefer mature oak woodland but also breed in mature upland ash and birch woods They require very high horizontal visibility a low abundance of shrub and understorey but with high proportion of moss and grass Grazing needs to be managed to maintain this open character but also allow the occasional replacement trees They will sometimes use mature open conifer woodland where natural tree holes occur Generally they prefer trees that have tree holes i e dead trees or dead limbs on healthy trees They also like lichens that grow on trees Grant funding for conservation Edit The Forestry Commission offers grants under a scheme called England s Woodland Improvement Grant EWIG as does Natural England s Environmental Stewardship Scheme References Edit a b c d e BirdLife International 2019 Phylloscopus inornatus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T22715310A146638886 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T22715310A146638886 en Retrieved 7 October 2021 a b c Silverin Bengt 1980 Effects of long acting testosterone treatment on freeliving pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca during the breeding period Animal Behaviour 28 3 906 912 doi 10 1016 s0003 3472 80 80152 7 ISSN 0003 3472 S2CID 53177170 a b c d Robinson R A 2005 Pied Flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca BTO BirdFacts British Trust for Ornithology Retrieved 4 August 2017 a b RSPB Pied Flycatcher Information Page RSPB Retrieved 24 September 2013 a b von Haartman Lars 1951 Successive Polygamy Behaviour 3 4 256 274 doi 10 1163 156853951x00296 a b c d Silverin B G Andersson 1984 Food composition of adult and nestling Pied Flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca during the breeding period in Swedish with English summary Var Fagelvarld 43 3 517 524 Flycatcher The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th ed 2012 Encyclopedia com Retrieved December 19 2012 a b c d e f Salvador Rodrigo B Henk van der Jeugd Barbara M Tomotani 2017 Taxonomy of the European Pied Flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca Aves Muscicapidae Zootaxa 4291 171 182 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 4291 1 10 Sherborn C Davies 1905 The new species of birds in Vroeg s catalogue 1764 Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections 47 332 341 336 No 156 Rookmaaker L C Pieters F F J M 2000 Birds in the sales catalogue of Adriaan Vroeg 1764 described by Pallas and Vosmaer Contributions to Zoology 69 4 271 277 doi 10 1163 18759866 06904005 Parkin David T 2003 Birding and DNA species for the new millennium Bird Study 50 3 223 242 doi 10 1080 00063650309461316 a b c Alatalo Rauno V Arne Lundberg 1984 Polyterritorial polygyny in the pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca evidence for the deception hypothesis Annales Zoologici Fennici 21 217 228 a b c Alatalo Rauno V Carlson Allan Lundberg Arne Ulfstrand Staffan 1981 The Conflict Between Male Polygamy and Female Monogamy The Case of the Pied Flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca The American Naturalist 117 5 738 753 doi 10 1086 283756 S2CID 85184225 Lundberg Arne Rauno V Alatalo Allan Carlson Staffan Ulfstrand 1981 Biometry habitat distribution and breeding success in the pied flycatcher ficedula hypoleuca Ornis Scandinavica 12 1 68 79 doi 10 2307 3675907 JSTOR 3675907 Alatalo Rauno V Karin Gottlander Arne Lundberg 1987 Extra pair copulations and mate guarding in the polyterritorial pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca Behaviour 1 101 3 139 155 doi 10 1163 156853987X00404 a b Harvey P H Greenwood P J Campbell B Stenning M J 1984 Breeding dispersal of the pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca Journal of Animal Ecology 2 3 727 736 doi 10 2307 4655 JSTOR 4655 Orians G H 1969 On the evolution of mating systems in birds and mammals The American Naturalist 12 3 589 603 doi 10 1086 282628 S2CID 85112984 Weatherhead Patrick J R J Robertson 1979 Offspring quality and the polygyny threshold the sexy son hypothesis The American Naturalist 113 2 201 208 doi 10 1086 283379 S2CID 85283084 a b Stenmark Geir Tore Slagsvold Jan T Lifjeld 1988 Polygyny in the pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca a test of the deception hypothesis Animal Behaviour 36 6 1646 1657 doi 10 1016 s0003 3472 88 80105 2 ISSN 0003 3472 S2CID 53146095 Lampe H M T Slagsvold 1994 Individual recognition based on male song in a female bird Ornithology 13 2 163 164 Dale S T Slagsvold 1994 Polygyny and deception in the pied flycatcher can females determine male mating status Animal Behaviour 48 5 1207 1217 doi 10 1006 anbe 1994 1353 ISSN 0003 3472 S2CID 53162817 Dale Svein Amundsen T Lifjeld J T Slagsvold T 1990 Mate Sampling Behaviour of Female Pied Flycatchers Evidence for Active Mate Choice Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 27 2 87 91 doi 10 1007 BF00168450 S2CID 43744589 Davies Nicholas B John R Krebs and Stuart A West An Introduction to Behavioural Ecology 4th ed John Wiley amp Sons 2012 Print ISBN 978 1 4051 1416 5 Kilpimaa J Alatalo R V Ratti O Siikamaki P 1995 Do pied flycatcher females guard their monogamous status Animal Behaviour 50 3 573 578 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 95 80120 0 S2CID 53160752 Slagsvold T T Amundsen S Dale H Lampe 1992 Female female aggression explains polyterritoriality in male pied flycatchers Animal Behaviour 32 3 397 407 doi 10 1016 s0003 3472 05 80100 9 ISSN 0003 3472 S2CID 53263821 Slagsvold T S Dale 1995 Polygyny and female aggression in the pied flycatcher a comment on Ratti et al Animal Behaviour 23 3 167 175 doi 10 1016 0003 3472 95 80144 8 S2CID 53201140 Noor Mohamed A F 1999 Reinforcement and other consequences of sympatry Heredity The Genetics Society Nature 83 5 503 508 doi 10 1038 sj hdy 6886320 ISSN 0018 067X PMID 10620021 ORCID 0000 0002 5400 4408 GS 5nkhrpUAAAAJ Ellegren Hans Smeds Linnea Burri Reto Olason Pall I Backstrom Niclas Kawakami Takeshi Kunstner Axel Makinen Hannu Nadachowska Brzyska Krystyna Qvarnstrom Anna Uebbing Severin November 2012 The genomic landscape of species divergence in Ficedula flycatchers Nature 491 7426 756 760 doi 10 1038 nature11584 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 23103876 S2CID 4414084 Alund Murielle Immler Simone Rice Amber M Qvarnstrom Anna 2013 06 23 Low fertility of wild hybrid male flycatchers despite recent divergence Biology Letters 9 3 20130169 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2013 0169 ISSN 1744 9561 PMC 3645050 PMID 23576780 Svedin Nina Wiley Chris Veen Thor Gustafsson Lars Qvarnstrom Anna 2008 03 22 Natural and sexual selection against hybrid flycatchers Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 275 1635 735 744 doi 10 1098 rspb 2007 0967 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 2596841 PMID 18211878 McFarlane S Eryn Sirkia Paivi M Alund Murielle Qvarnstrom Anna 2016 09 01 Proulx Stephen R ed Hybrid Dysfunction Expressed as Elevated Metabolic Rate in Male Ficedula Flycatchers PLOS ONE 11 9 e0161547 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0161547 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 5008804 PMID 27583553 Vallin Niclas Rice Amber M Bailey Richard I Husby Arild Qvarnstrom Anna April 2012 Positive Feedback Between Ecological and Reproductive Character Displacement in a Young Avian Hybrid Zone Evolution 66 4 1167 1179 doi 10 1111 j 1558 5646 2011 01518 x PMID 22486696 S2CID 13238049 Stre Glenn Peter Moum Truls Bures Stanislav Kral Miroslav Adamjan Martin Moreno Juan 5 June 1997 A sexually selected character displacement in flycatchers reinforces premating isolation Nature 387 6633 589 592 doi 10 1038 42451 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4363912 Coyne Jerry A 2004 Speciation H Allen Orr Sunderland Mass Sinauer Associates p 361 ISBN 0 87893 091 4 OCLC 55078441 Wallin Lars 2008 04 03 Divergent character displacement in the song of two allospecies the Pied Flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca and the Collared Flycatcher Ficedula albicollis Ibis 128 2 251 259 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1986 tb02672 x Alatalo R V A Lundberg K Stahlbrandt 1982 Why do pied flycatcher females mate with already mated males Animal Behaviour 30 2 585 593 doi 10 1016 s0003 3472 82 80072 9 ISSN 0003 3472 S2CID 53179058 Lifjeld J T T Slagsvold 1990 Manipulations of male parental investment in polygynous pied fly catchers Behavioral Ecology 23 5 171 181 doi 10 1093 beheco 1 1 48 Lundberg Arne 2010 The Pied Flycatcher A amp C Black pp 55 59 ISBN 978 1408137802 a b von Haartman L 1954 Der Traeurfliegenschnaaper Die Nahrungsbiologic 83 1 1 96 Lack D 1940 Courtship feeding in birds The Auk 57 2 169 178 doi 10 2307 4078744 JSTOR 4078744 Bibby C J R E Green 1980 Foraging behaviour of migrant pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca on temporary territories Animal Ecology 49 2 507 521 doi 10 2307 4260 JSTOR 4260 Newton S F Rare Breeding Birds in Ireland in 2014 and 2015 Irish Birds Vol 10 p 234 Grid map of records on the Gateway for Pied Flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca NBN Gateway Archived from the original on 29 October 2016 Retrieved 24 September 2013 Christiaan Both Sandra Bouwhuis C M Lessells Marcel E Visser 2006 Climate change and population declines in a long distance migratory bird PDF Nature 441 7089 81 83 Bibcode 2006Natur 441 81B doi 10 1038 nature04539 PMID 16672969 S2CID 4414217 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ficedula hypoleuca Ageing and sexing PDF 5 7 MB by Javier Blasco Zumeta amp Gerd Michael Heinze Avibase Archived 2019 09 13 at the Wayback Machine Oiseaux Images RSPB Website Description Song of a Pied Flycatcher a British Library sound recording Male Pied Flycatcher Song YouTube video filmed in northern Sweden in May Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European pied flycatcher amp oldid 1125492533, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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