T.D. Williams’s research while affiliated with Simon Fraser University and other places

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Publications (2)


Plasticity in diurnal activity and temporal phenotype during parental care in European starlings, Sturnus vulgaris
  • Article

January 2020

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37 Reads

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24 Citations

Animal Behaviour

C. Maury

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T.D. Williams

We used an automated radiotelemetry system to determine diurnal patterns of activity and temporal phenotype (onset and cessation of activity) in female European starlings during breeding. Parental care is thought to be the most ‘costly’ part of reproduction, with high rates of intense activity due to foraging and provisioning for chicks, so we predicted that variation in timing of activity should be closely related to breeding success. Diurnal variation in activity varied systematically with breeding stage in a way consistent with specific demands of each phase of parental care: incubating females were more active late in the day (1600–1800 hours), while chick-rearing females were more active early in the morning (0700–1100 hours). There was marked individual variation in timing of onset, and to a lesser extent cessation, of activity, e.g. chick-rearing females first became active 7–127 min after morning civil twilight, with low to moderate repeatability within and among breeding stages (individual explained 2–62% of total variation). On average, females were active later, and ceased being active earlier, during chick rearing compared with incubation. Chick-rearing birds had a longer active day, but only by 2.3% (36% of the seasonal increase in total available daylength). Thus, chick-rearing females were relatively less active (‘lazier’), which is consistent with the idea that parents work more efficiently rather than simply working harder. We found little evidence that chick-rearing activity was associated with variation in measures of current reproduction (provisioning rate, number and quality of chicks), future fecundity (initiating a second brood, cumulative 2-year productivity) or survival (local return rate). Our study demonstrates that time-keeping mechanisms show plasticity in response to reproductive state and can be modulated by ‘biotic’ (e.g. prey availability) or ‘social’ time (demands of parental care).


Annual variation in breeding diet of European Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) for 2013–2016 based on (a) visually observed meals and (b) collected meals that highlight the occurrence of black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens) in the diet in 2015 and 2016
Annual variation in breeding diet of European Starling (Sturnus vulgaris) females (a) and males (b) in 2015 (open bars) and 2016 (hatched bars) from video analysis (n = total number of prey items)
Individual variation in frequency of occurrence of black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens) (rank order % of total prey items) in the breeding diet of European Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris): (a) females in 2015; (b) females in 2016; (c) males in 2015; (d) males in 2016
Relationship between brood size at fledging of European Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) and number of prey returned to the nest per 30 min for (a) tipulid larvae by females, (b) black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens) by females, (c) tipulid larvae by birds of both sexes, and (d) black soldier flies by birds of both sexes
Effects of an introduced, novel prey on diet and reproduction in the diet-specialist European Starling (Sturnus vulgaris)
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

November 2018

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43 Reads

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1 Citation

T.D. Williams

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C. Gillespie

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Diet specialization has important consequences for how individuals or species deal with environmental change that causes changes in availability of prey species. We took advantage of a “natural experiment” — establishment of a commercial insect farm — that introduced a novel prey item, black soldier flies (Hermetia illucens (Linnaeus, 1758)), to the diet-specialist European Starling (Sturnus vulgaris Linnaeus, 1758). We investigated evidence for individual diet specialization (IDS) and the consequences of diet specialization and exploitation of novel prey on breeding productivity. In all 4 years of our study, tipulid larvae were the most common prey item. Soldier flies were not recorded in diets in 2013–2014; however, coincident with the establishment of the commercial insect farming operation, they comprised 22% and 30% of all prey items in the diets of European Starling females and males, respectively, in 2015. There was marked individual variation in use of soldier flies (4%–48% and 2%–70% in females and males, respectively), but we found little evidence of dichotomous IDS, i.e., where only some individuals have a specialized diet. We found no evidence for negative effects of use of soldier flies on breeding productivity: brood size at fledging and chick quality (mass, tarsus length) were independent of the number and proportion (%) of soldier flies returned to the nest.

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Citations (2)


... Animals that organize their active days around light and dark occupy a temporal niche that aims to optimize foraging, predator avoidance, and social encounters with conspecifics (Wikelski and Hau 1995;DeCoursey et al. 2000;Davidson and Menaker 2003;Favreau et al. 2009;Yerushalmi and Green 2009;Kronfeld-Schor et al. 2017). Despite predictable environmental cues, variation exists in when individuals within the same population begin and end their daily activity relative to sunrise or sunset (ie chronotype in the wild; Hau et al. 2017;Helm et al. 2017;Maury et al. 2020). Understanding how daily activity patterns vary and the degree to which these behaviors exhibit flexibility or remain consistent across life-history stages of an individual is necessary for understanding how selection might have shaped daily activity and if the future evolution of chronotypes might be constrained. ...

Reference:

Daily activity is repeatable but varies across the breeding season in female great tits
Plasticity in diurnal activity and temporal phenotype during parental care in European starlings, Sturnus vulgaris
  • Citing Article
  • January 2020

Animal Behaviour

... Moreover, any consideration of optimal habitat must involve a precise fit with the ecological specialisation of the species in question. The Common Starling is characterised as a functional specialist on account of its high dependence on tipulid larvae when feeding young, but its diet is broader at other times (Williams et al. 2019). The Javan Pied Starling Gracupica jalla, another confamilial once sympatric with the Bali Myna, is speculated to have had a similar specialism also involving soil invertebrates (van Balen & Collar 2021). ...

Effects of an introduced, novel prey on diet and reproduction in the diet-specialist European Starling (Sturnus vulgaris)