About: Acanthiza is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 19 publications have been published within this topic receiving 612 citations. The topic is also known as: thornbill.
TL;DR: It is proposed that a major factor is the low risk of dispersing relative to staying at home in pusilla compared with the other two species, which seems not to be due to greater adult survival and habitat saturation in the latter two, nor to reduced seasonal fluctuations in food.
Abstract: Brown (Acanthiza pusilla), buff-rumped (A. reguloides) and striated thronbills (A. lineata) were studied over three years in eucalypt forest in northern New South Wales. All three are small, sexually monomorphic insectivores. A. pusilla is a shrub-feeder, reguloides a bark and ground forager and lineata gleans from eucalypt leaves. A. reguloides and lineata show a two-tiered social organization with territorial clans in the non-breeding season which split up into breeding pairs or groups of 3 or 4. Non-breeding birds feed nestlings and fledglings, and after reformation of the clan adults feed fledglings belonging to other groups. Females tend to disperse more than males before the next breeding season, males tend to stay and help. A. pusilla breeds in pairs, with no helpers, defends year-round territories and expels juveniles a few months after they fledge. We discuss possible reasons why A. pusilla is not cooperative whereas the other two species are. It seems not to be due to greater adult survival and habitat saturation in the latter two, nor to reduced seasonal fluctuations in food. We propose that a major factor is the low risk of dispersing relative to staying at home in pusilla compared with the other two species.
TL;DR: The genera Acanthiza and Malurus appear to behave as nucleus species, round which flocks are formed, in species that themselves form flocks on Black Mountain, ACT.
Abstract: Data are presented on 105 mixed-species feeding flocks of insectivorous birds on Black Mountain, ACT. About half of the sixty-nine species present participated in flocks, with an average of about four species per flock. Flocks were dominated by species that themselves form flocks and up to five such species were present at one time. Marked seasonal change occurred, with flocking activity greatest in winter and lowest in the spring breeding season. Individual species also displayed seasonal differences in participation. The genera Acanthiza and Malurus appear to behave as nucleus species, round which flocks are formed.
TL;DR: A detailed account of the breeding biology of the brown thornbill is provided, it is confirmed that they breed exclusively in pairs, and their population demography is compared with what is known for other members of the Pardalotidae.
Abstract: The genus Acanthiza may be important in understanding the evolution of avian mating systems because while brown thornbills, Acanthiza pusilla, are thought to breed only in pairs, a recent phylogenetic analysis suggests that cooperative breeding is the ancestral trait within this genus. We provide a detailed account of the breeding biology of the brown thornbill, confirm that they breed exclusively in pairs, and compare their population demography with what is known for other members of the Pardalotidae. We found that brown thornbills produced small clutches (3 eggs) with a two-day laying interval, had a long incubation period (declining from 19 to 16 days through the season), and had a long breeding season (4.0 months) that allowed females to occasionally raise two successful broods. Brown thornbills, in our study, produced an average of 1.57 fledglings per pair and had relatively high annual survival rates (c. 63%). We found no evidence to suggest that the evolution of pair-breeding within the Pardalotidae is associated with a reduction in annual survival rates, a short breeding season with reduced productivity, or high levels of predation post-fledging. Since there also appear to be no ecological correlates with mating system in the Pardalotidae we suggest that examination of reproductive conflict between parents and young may shed light on the evolution of pairbreeding in this family.
TL;DR: Investigation of brood sex ratio biases and parental provisioning behaviour in the brown thornbill, Acanthiza pusilla, a sexually dimorphic Australian passserine, suggests that female brown thornbills adjust their primary sex ratio in response to pair bond duration.
TL;DR: Examination of settlement patterns, divorce and breeding dispersal in a sedentary Australian passerine, the brown thornbill, in relation to two traits known to influence extrapair paternity finds that females obtain a direct benefit from preferring older males as social mates because breeding success improves with male age in brown thornbills.
Abstract: In socially monogamous birds, females may express mate preferences when they first select a breeding partner, through divorce and subsequent breeding dispersal to a new partner and through extrapair mating. We examined settlement patterns, divorce and breeding dispersal in a sedentary Australian passerine, the brown thornbill (Acanthiza pusilla), in relation to two traits known to influence extrapair paternity (male age and male size). Settlement decisions, divorce and territory switching behaviour were all female strategies that reduced their likelihood of breeding with 1-year-old males. Females preferred to settle in territories with 2+ -year-old males, were more likely to divorce 1-year-old males, and only switched territories if they had an opportunity to form a new pair bond with an old male. In contrast, female settlement and divorce decisions were not influenced by male size. Female thornbills obtain a direct benefit from preferring older males as social mates because breeding success improves with male age in brown thornbills. Nevertheless, divorce rates in this species were low (14% of pair bonds were terminated by divorce), and individuals rarely switched territories following the death of a mate. Both of these mating strategies appeared to be primarily constrained by the distance adults moved to initiate a new pair bond (1–2 territories) and by the limited availability of unpaired older males in the immediate neighbourhood.