Theses and Dissertations

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    Behavioural Ecology of Colony Formation and Function of Colonial Breeding in Chtnut-Headed Bee-Eater.
    (Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, 2011) Supriya; Vasudevan, K.; Mohan, D.
    Breeding in densely distributed territories that contain no other resources apart from breeding site is known as colonial breeding. Despite several long-term investigations, there are several questions regarding colony formation, the function of coloniality and the variation in colony sizes that remain unanswered. Chestnut-headed bee-eaters (Merops leschenaulti) are tropical Old World birds (Family Meropidae) that breed both solitarily and in small colonies. Hence they are well-suited subjects for the study of colonial breeding. This study was conducted for five months from December 2010 to May 2011 in parts of Haliyal division and Karwar division in Uttara Kannada district, Karnataka. It is an attempt to explain the variation in colony size through gaining insights into the behaviour of colony formation and function of colonial breeding. A combination of measuring habitat characteristics, capturing and measuring birds, recording reproductive success of breeding pairs across a gradient of colony sizes and behavioural observations were used. A total of 17 nests were found during the course of the study distributed over three colonies and five solitary nests. No significant difference was found between habitat characteristics at solitary and colony nests. Also, there was no shortage of potential breeding sites, as found by the ratio of number of nests to the amount of substrate available. This suggests that the mechanism of colony formation in CHB is conspecific attraction and is not merely habitat mediated aggregation. The body size of the colony nesters was found to be greater than the body size of solitary nesters. This implies that the optimum colony-size is different for different individuals, with larger individuals having a preference for colony nesting. Program MARK was used to analyze nest survival data. It was found that the daily survival rate of nests was not significantly different across colonies of different sizes, lending further credence to the hypothesis that different individuals have different colony-size optima. Colony nests were initiated about a week before the solitary nests and nesting was more synchronous at colony sites. During the nest digging stage of breeding, a number of aerial chases were observed between the birds, which hint at a role for despotism in influencing variation in colony sizes. Provisioning frequency was found to be higher and showing larger variation at solitary nests than at colony nests. A possible explanation for this is that there is greater competition at colony sites. Therefore, colony-nesting must be having some other benefit that compensates for the cost of competition. Further investigations into the conspecific cue that mediates colony formation and· the benefit of coloniality need to be carried out.
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    Responses Shown by Bird Communities to Teak Palatations in Sagar Forest Division, Karnataka
    (Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun, 2009) Barve, Sahas S.; Mohan, D.; Qureshi, Qamar
    This study was aimed at discerning the responses shown by bird communities to teak plantations of various age classes in Sagar Forest Division, Karnataka within Latitude 13° 36' and 14° 38' North 74° Longitude 38' and 75° 32'East Latitude. Birds were sampled using line transects in three habitat strata, natural plantations, mature teak plantations and young teak plantations. Density, diversity and community similarity were the chief ecological responses that were quantified to bring out differences in the usage of forest plantations by native bird fauna. Habitat (vegetation) correlates, both structural and floristic were quantified to establish the reasons for differences. The sampling period was from December 2008 to April 2009. This period was divided into two seasons, winter and summer. A total of 9 transects were laid, marked and sampled at least 4 times per season. Birds were divided into three feeding guilds and three habitat guilds for analysis. The overall density of birds across the three strata was found to be higher in summer than in winter. However a guild level analysis showed that in winter while insectivorous birds were most abundant in natural forest with decreasing density towards young plantations (F (6.241) , p< 0.05). There was no difference in their density in summer. Phytophagous birds showed the exact reverse trend. Density of this guild was higher in young plantations than natural forests and mature plantations in winter and summer (F(S.689), p< 0.05), (F (14.302), p< 0.01) respectively. Overall diversity of birds showed a trend of decreasing species richness from natural forests to young plantations in both seasons. However this difference was almost non existent in summer at the guild level. The abundance of birds belonging to evergreen and moist deciduous forests shows a consistent· rise in abundance from winter to summer in all the three strata. There is also evidence that there is ingression of individuals of species that were common to both seasons possibly for nesting. The overall community similarity is quite high between the three strata and it increases from winter to summer. Bird diversity was found to be affected by the vertical spread of vegetation and tree height heterogeneity (R=0.871, p