Glen E. Woolfenden’s research while affiliated with Cornell University and other places

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Publications (75)


Sooty Tern (Onychoprion fuscatus)
  • Article

March 2020

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21 Reads

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3 Citations

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C. J. Feare

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[...]

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Glen E. Woolfenden

Role of Helpers in the Sentinel Behaviour of the Florida Scrub Jay (Aphelocoma c. coerulescens)
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 2010

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204 Reads

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38 Citations

Ethology

Two independently conceived and executed field studies using somewhat different methodologies tested the hypothesis that non-breeding helpers of the Florida scrub jay (Aphelocoma c. coerulescens) contribute importantly to antipredator sentinel behaviour. Specifically, we made four predictions: 1. Helpers participate to a non-trivial degree in sentinel behaviour; 2. Breeding pairs with helpers spend less time on sentinel behaviour and hence more time foraging; 3. Breeders with helpers have more protected foraging time; and 4. Groups with helpers have greater total sentinel time.

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FIGURE 1. Timing of first clutches of focal Florida Scrub-Jays in wildlands and suburbs. Vertical lines within the boxes represent the mean laying date. The boxes represent the time during which the middle 50% of the population initiated laying. Error bars represent the timing of laying for 10% and 90% of the populations . Filled circles represent outliers.  
FIGURE 2. Activity budgets of prelaying female Florida Scrub-Jays in wildlands and suburbs. Instantaneous behaviors are (a) perching, (b) foraging, and (c) interspecific interactions. Flight (d) is measured as the percentage of 15-sec intervals in which flight occurred between behavioral samples. Sample size (in females), wildlands: 1996, n 19; 1997, n 12; suburbs: 1996, n 34; 1997, n 16. Note differences in y-axis scales.  
FIGURE 4. Mean SE estimated energy expenditure (kJ hr 1 ) of prelaying female Florida Scrub-Jays in wildlands and suburbs. Sample size (in females), wildlands: 1996, n 19; 1997, n 12; suburbs: 1996, n 34; 1997, n 16.  
Variation in foraging behavior, diet and time of breeding of Florida Scrub-Jays in suburban and wildland habitats

January 2009

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727 Reads

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75 Citations

Ornithological Applications

Supplemental food enables some birds to lay eggs earlier, perhaps by allowing birds to increase their energy intake or allocate energy from other activities to reproduction. We examined the relationships between prelaying behavior, food handling and consumption rates, and the timing of breeding of female Florida Scrub-Jays (Aphelocoma coerulescens) in suburban and wildland habitats. Scrub-jays in suburban habitats had access to ad libitum human-provided foods; wildland jays did not. During both years of this study, suburban scrub-jays bred earlier than their wildland counterparts. Wildland scrub-jays bred earlier in 1997 than in 1996, but the timing of breeding by suburban scrub-jays did not vary between years. Suburban scrub-jays spent less time foraging and more time perching than wildland jays. They handled more food per hour and per foraging hour, suggesting their foraging was more efficient. Despite this, food consumption rates did not differ between the two habitats. Neither time spent foraging or perching nor food consumption rates significantly influenced variation in time of breeding among individuals. Time of breeding was significantly influenced by site, year, and rate of food handling. Individuals that handled more food items per foraging hour, that is, those individuals that were most efficient, were the earliest breeders in both habitats. These results suggest that foraging efficiency increases with access to human-provided food and that resource predictability may be a perceptual cue for the appropriate timing of breeding.


Fig. 1 Average reflectance (with standard error bars at 100-nm intervals) of the UV-blue tail feathers of male (gray line) and female (black line) Florida Scrub-Jays in 1999. Dashed line separates UV and human-visible wavelengths
Table 1 Mean (±SD) of measures of juvenile tail color for male and female Florida Scrub-Jays in each year of the study
Juvenile coloration of Florida Scrub-Jays ( Aphelocoma coerulescens ) is sexually dichromatic and correlated with condition

July 2008

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219 Reads

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20 Citations

Journal of Ornithology

The Florida Scrub-Jay is a monogamous cooperative breeder in which both males and females display extensive structurally based blue plumage. Juveniles of this species exhibit blue tail and wing feathers that they begin growing as nestlings, and some of these feathers are retained throughout their first year. Although the birds appear to be sexually monochromatic, we assessed whether cryptic dichromatism exists in both the magnitude and pattern of coloration in tail feathers of juvenile Florida Scrub-Jays. We then determined whether variation in plumage coloration is associated with nutritional condition during molt. Tails of juvenile male Florida Scrub-Jays exhibit a greater proportion of UV reflectance than those of females. Mass at age 11days and ptilochronology of the juvenile tail feathers were used as measures of individual nutritional condition during feather growth, and the latter was found to be positively associated with UV chroma. These data demonstrate that Florida Scrub-Jays are sexually dichromatic and suggest that variation in plumage color may be condition dependent, although we cannot rule out alternative explanations. Juvenile plumage coloration, therefore, has the potential to function as a signal of individual quality in both males and females.


Figure 2: Florida scrub-jays called in all portions of their sentinel bouts but called somewhat more often later in bouts. Each x represents a single instance of calling by an individual scrub-jay. Overlapping data points have been displaced slightly to make them more visible.
Do Conversational Gutturals Help Florida Scrub‐Jays Coordinate Their Sentinel Behavior?

March 2008

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107 Reads

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12 Citations

Ethology

Florida scrub-jays, Aphelocoma coerulescens, perform sentinel behavior in which individuals alternate bouts of watchfulness with little overlap. We examined how calls might facilitate sentinel coordination. Small soft calls labeled conversational gutturals were heard more often from sentinels than from foraging birds. Calls occurred infrequently throughout sentinel bouts but were more common later in bouts. The pattern of calling does not match predictions for a ‘watchman’s song’ at regular intervals nor for a signal at the end of a sentinel bout. Thus, our quantitative assessment of calling by sentinels did not find support for either standard hypothesis. Although Florida scrub-jays clearly have information on each other’s sentinel behavior, our results suggest that calls provide perhaps a fraction of this information.



The Effects of Social Context on the Food‐Caching Behavior of Florida Scrub‐Jays (Aphelocoma coerulescens)

June 2007

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68 Reads

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13 Citations

Ethology

Florida scrub-jays are cooperative breeders that live in family groups consisting of a breeding pair, often with several non-breeding helpers. Florida scrub-jays cache food by scatter-hoarding items for later consumption. Within family groups, members have the opportunity to observe and pilfer the caches of other members. We observed jays harvesting experimentally provisioned peanuts alone and in the presence of other family members, to determine whether jays modify their food-handling behavior relative to social context. Non-breeding helpers were less likely to cache in the presence of the dominant male breeder than when alone and all jays tended to cache out of sight when observed by another jay. These changes in caching behavior are consistent with cache protection strategies employed by other species. However, the adaptive value of such cache protection within a sedentary cooperatively breeding family group on a year-round territory is unclear.


Florida Scrub‐Jays Compensate for the Sentinel Behavior of Flockmates

August 2006

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27 Reads

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14 Citations

Ethology

Sentinel coordination requires that individuals react to the sentinel behavior of others. Previous work showed that Florida scrub-jays are sentinels more often when given supplemental food. Here we measured how birds in pairs reacted when their mates were fed. Scrub-jays were sentinels less when their mates were fed, demonstrating compensation. Indirect evidence suggests that this compensatory decrease in sentinel behavior was smaller than the increase in sentinel behavior by their mates. In addition, males in newly established groups were sentinels less often.


Consequences of heterogeneity in survival probability in a population of Florida scrub-jays

July 2006

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47 Reads

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61 Citations

Using data on breeding birds from a 35‐year study of Florida scrub‐jays Aphelocoma coerulescens (Bosc 1795), we show that survival probabilities are structured by age, birth cohort, and maternal family, but not by sex. Using both accelerated failure time (AFT) and Cox proportional hazard models, the data are best described by models incorporating variation among birth cohorts and greater mortality hazard with increasing age. AFT models using Weibull distributions with the shape parameter > 1 were always the best‐fitting models. Shared frailty models allowing for family structure greatly reduce model deviance. The best‐fitting models included a term for frailty shared by maternal families. To ask how long a data set must be to reach qualitatively the same conclusions, we repeated the analyses for all possible truncated data sets of 2 years in length or greater. Length of the data set affects the parameter estimates, but not the qualitative conclusions. In all but three of 337 truncated data sets the best‐fitting models pointed to same conclusions as the full data set. Shared frailty models appear to be quite robust. The data are not adequate for testing hypotheses as to whether variation in frailty is heritable. Substantial structured heterogeneity for survival exists in this population. Such structured heterogeneity has been shown to have substantial effects in reducing demographic stochasticity.


Citations (61)


... Strict fidelity of Florida Scrub-Jays to their native habitat type is well documented (Breininger, 1989Breininger, , 1990Breininger, , 1992 Breininger and Smith, 1992; Cox, 1984; Woolfenden and Fitzpatrick, 1984 ). Widespread conversion of scrub habitat to pastures, citrus groves, and residential/commercial developments over the past century has confined all remaining Florida Scrub-Jay populations to habitat fragments embedded within matrices of anthropogenic landscapes (Stith et al., 1996; Thaxton and Hingtgen, 1996; Woolfenden and Fitzpatrick, 1991). Small populations sizes, fire suppression, and a variety of other human influences are causing the species to decline rapidly. ...

Reference:

Role of human-modified habitat in protecting specialist species: A case study in the threatened Florida Scrub-Jay
Florida Scrub Jay ecology and conservation
  • Citing Article
  • May 1991

... A number of other bird species do exhibit well-studied, continuous partnerships that include maintenance of association outside of the reproductive season and, while they may not have been experimentally studied in terms of pair bond behaviors, are likely to be pair bonding. Examples include blue ducks, Hymenolaimus malacorhynchos (Williams and McKinney, 1996); barnacle geese, Branta leucopus (Black et al., 1996); swans, genus Cygnus (Rees et al., 1996); jackdaws, Corvus monedula (Kubitza et al., 2015); and Pinyon and Florida scrub jays, Gymnorhinus cyanocephalus and Aphelocoma coerulescens (Marzluff et al., 1996). An interesting study of captive Caribbean flamingos (Phoenicopterus ruber ruber) found that some of the flamingos formed putative pair bonds, characterized mostly by continuous proximity, shared breeding and lack of courtship behaviors towards other animals (Shannon, 2000). ...

Breeding partnerships of two New World jays
  • Citing Chapter
  • May 1996

... Terrestrial nesting habitats are at risk to decrease, and in some locations, disappear, due to sea level rise and this is especially an issue for species like great frigatebirds that have reached carrying capacity in some colonies (Hatfield et al., 2012). However, sooty terns have aseasonal breeding cycles in some colonies which could allow flexibility in ocean conditions to choose more optimal conditions during breeding (Reynolds et al., 2015;Schreiber et al., 2020). Therefore, incorporation of species-specific habitat requirements and predicted shifts in distribution or habitat with climate change projections could enhance MPA efficacy. ...

Sooty Tern (Onychoprion fuscatus)
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 2002

... Previous studies with this species have focused on the amount of time allocated to sentinel behaviour [22][23][24], but not on visual monitoring strategies that sentinels can use for threat detection. In the non-breeding season, sentinels monitor their surroundings for aerial predators such as Cooper's hawks (Accipiter cooperi) and falcons (Falco spp.) [25], which rely on surprise rather than stealth to approach their prey. Sentinels also monitor neighbours from abutting territories for possible intrusions. ...

Florida Scrub-Jay (Aphelocoma coerulescens)
  • Citing Article
  • January 1996

The Birds of North America Online

... Urban environments are typically abundant in such resources (Shochat et al., 2006;Anderies et al., 2007;Møller, 2009). They have been shown to allow many species to devote less time to foraging (Sol et al., 2013;Lowry et al., 2013) and improve foraging efficiency (Saj et al., 1999;Fleischer et al., 2003). As such, abundant urban resources may mitigate or buffer impacts of, for example, foraging-thermoregulation trade-offs, on the ability to maintain body mass. ...

Variation in Foraging Behavior, Diet, and Time of Breeding of Florida Scrub-Jays in Suburban and Wildland Habitats
  • Citing Article
  • August 2003

Ornithological Applications

... Our results compliment previous research regarding the influence of nestling mass on natal dispersal behavior (e.g., Naef-Daenzer et al. 2001;Ekman 2006). Heavier individuals are usually able to outcompete nestmates for food and drive lighter siblings out of the natal territory through aggressive behavior (Fitzpatrick and Woolfenden 1984;Tinbergen and Boerlijst 1990;Neuenschwander et al. 2003). Florida scrubjays (Aphelocoma coerulescens) with greater fledgling mass are more likely to survive and remain on their natal territories than lighter siblings (Mumme et al. 2015). ...

14. The Helpful Shall Inherit the Scrub
  • Citing Chapter
  • December 1987

... Small scrub oaks (Quercus spp.) are the dominant vegetation at the station. Florida scrub jays in the area live in all-purpose territories year round and are nearly all banded and monitored regularly to evaluate group size and breeding status [30]. Juveniles in this species remain in their natal territories after the breeding season and assist breeders in territory defense and predator detection. ...

The Florida Scrub Jay: Demography of a Cooperative-Breeding Bird
  • Citing Article
  • February 1986

Ornithological Applications

... For example, a reproductive queue forms in superb fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus) in which males queue to gain a breeding opportunity (Cockburn et al. 2008), with some males moving from their natal territory to minimise the wait for a breeding position. Male dispersal may result in greater fitness benefits, than remaining as a philopatric helper, in the absence of ecological constraint (Woolfenden 1989) which, in territorial species, is hypothesised to be the saturation of suitable habitat by sedentary established groups (Koenig 1981;Emlen 1982;Stacey and Ligon 1987). Following thorough removal of noisy miners in our study sites there was a sudden large scale release of productive habitat, and immatures of both sexes from nearby colonies may have perceived a benefit from early dispersal. ...

POPULATION ECOLOGY OF THE COOPERATIVELY BREEDING ACORN WOODPECKER
  • Citing Article
  • August 1989

Evolution

... The Florida scrub-jay is a cooperative breeder best known from a long-term study of a single population at Archbold Biological Station, which has remained relatively stable within mostly optimal habitat. Historically, this population experienced periods with limited breeding opportunities resulting in high levels of delayed breeding Woolfenden, 1990;Woolfenden & Fitzpatrick, 1984;Woolfenden & Fitzpatrick, 1991). We initiated long-term studies of Florida scrub-jays in conservation lands on central Florida's Atlantic coast, where there is great spatial and temporal variation in territory quality, compared with Archbold Biological Station (Breininger et al. 2014b). ...

Florida Scrub Jays: a synopsis after 18 years of study
  • Citing Article
  • January 1990

... Previous studies of the genetic diversity of Florida Scrub-Jays that included individuals from KSC have focused on comparisons with closely related species (McDonald et al. 1999), or within species comparisons at broad spatial scales (Coulon et al. 2008). Coulon et al. (2008) performed a state-wide study of Florida Scrub-Jay population genetics and concluded that 10-12 genetic groups existed within Florida. ...

Contrasting genetic structures in sister species of North American scrub-jays