Jaime Potti
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Jaime Potti.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | 2004
Christiaan Both; Aleksandr V. Artemyev; Bert Blaauw; Richard J. Cowie; Aarnoud J. Dekhuijzen; Tapio Eeva; Anders Enemar; Lars Gustafsson; E.V. Ivankina; Antero Järvinen; Neil B. Metcalfe; N. Erik I. Nyholm; Jaime Potti; Pierre-Alain Ravussin; Juan José Sanz; Bengt Silverin; Frederick Maurice Slater; L. V. Sokolov; János Török; Wolfgang Winkel; Jonathan Wright; Herwig Zang; Marcel E. Visser
Advances in the phenology of organisms are often attributed to climate change, but alternatively, may reflect a publication bias towards advances and may be caused by environmental factors unrelated to climate change. Both factors are investigated using the breeding dates of 25 long–term studied populations of Ficedula flycatchers across Europe. Trends in spring temperature varied markedly between study sites, and across populations the advancement of laying date was stronger in areas where the spring temperatures increased more, giving support to the theory that climate change causally affects breeding date advancement.
Acta Ornithologica | 2010
Marcel M. Lambrechts; Frank Adriaensen; Daniel R. Ardia; Alexandr Artemyev; Francisco Atiénzar; Jerzy Bańbura; Emilio Barba; Jean Charles Bouvier; Jordi Camprodon; Caren B. Cooper; Russell D. Dawson; Marcel Eens; Tapio Eeva; Bruno Faivre; László Zsolt Garamszegi; Anne E. Goodenough; Andrew G. Gosler; Arnaud Grégoire; Simon C. Griffith; Lars Gustafsson; L. Scott Johnson; Wojciech Maria Kania; Oskars Keišs; Paulo E. Llambías; Mark C. Mainwaring; Raivo Mänd; Bruno Massa; Tomasz D. Mazgajski; Anders Pape Møller; Juan Moreno
Abstract. The widespread use of artificial nestboxes has led to significant advances in our knowledge of the ecology, behaviour and physiology of cavity nesting birds, especially small passerines. Nestboxes have made it easier to perform routine monitoring and experimental manipulation of eggs or nestlings, and also repeatedly to capture, identify and manipulate the parents. However, when comparing results across study sites the use of nestboxes may also introduce a potentially significant confounding variable in the form of differences in nestbox design amongst studies, such as their physical dimensions, placement height, and the way in which they are constructed and maintained. However, the use of nestboxes may also introduce an unconsidered and potentially significant confounding variable due to differences in nestbox design amongst studies, such as their physical dimensions, placement height, and the way in which they are constructed and maintained. Here we review to what extent the characteristics of artificial nestboxes (e.g. size, shape, construction material, colour) are documented in the ‘methods’ sections of publications involving hole-nesting passerine birds using natural or excavated cavities or artificial nestboxes for reproduction and roosting. Despite explicit previous recommendations that authors describe in detail the characteristics of the nestboxes used, we found that the description of nestbox characteristics in most recent publications remains poor and insufficient. We therefore list the types of descriptive data that should be included in the methods sections of relevant manuscripts and justify this by discussing how variation in nestbox characteristics can affect or confound conclusions from nestbox studies. We also propose several recommendations to improve the reliability and usefulness of research based on long-term studies of any secondary hole-nesting species using artificial nestboxes for breeding or roosting.
Oikos | 1995
Santiago Merino; Jaime Potti
The effects of blood sucking mites (Acari) and blowfly larvae (Diptera) ectoparasites on the growth and survival of nestling pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) breeding in nest boxes were studied. Mites significantly decreased mean within-brood tarsus length, a measure of skeletal size, and mass. High mite loads also increased within-brood variance in mass, although the effects varied depending on the quality of the nesting site. Significant interactions between the effects of mites and nest box quality and breeding phenology were detected, the lightest nestlings fledging from late, low quality nests with high mite loads. No effect of mite loads on nestling mortality was apparent. In contrast, blowfly larvae abundance contributed more to nestling mortality in one year, although this seemed to pave the way for brood survival in nests with high infestations. High abundances of both ectoparasite species were comparatively beneficial for pied flycatcher broods, suggesting a role for competition between ectoparasites that may ultimately increase host brood survival
The Condor | 1998
Jaime Potti
The timing of arrival from spring migration was studied in 4 years for male Pied Flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) in central Spain. Heritability and repeatability analyses were performed at several levels of familial resemblance and male age in order to determine whether arrival times are consistent within individuals between years and are similar between relatives. Oldest males arrived earlier. Arrival time explained much of the variation in laying time and number of young fledged. Age-independent variation in wing length also affected arrival date, the males with longest wings settling earlier. Arrival times were not repeatable within individuals across years and were not similar between relatives (parents-sons, full-sibs). Although genetic variation may exist in departure dates of long-distance migrant birds, the close connection of an early arrival to high reproductive success may have depleted genetic variation in arrival time. In addition, environmental variation probably is too high to detect significant heritability in arrival times without very large sample sizes.
Oecologia | 1999
Jaime Potti; Juan Moreno; Santiago Merino; Oscar Frías; Rosa Rodríguez
Abstract We report a field study of the haematocrit of pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) nestlings when close to fledging. First a descriptive study was conducted of both fledgling and adult haematocrit over 2 years to analyse correlates of variation in this trait. Then a swapping experiment was performed to see whether variation among fledglings had a measurable genetic component. Average fledgling haematocrits were lower than those of their male and female parents. Intraclass correlations among sibships in fledgling haematocrit were high in both years, indicating that the estimates of resemblance were inflated, probably by common environmental effects. Fledgling haematocrits were unrelated to date and number of young in the nest. Fledglings with a high haematocrit were heavy and had thick breast muscles. There were no significant relationships between the average fledgling haematocrit and those of the adults caring for them. Nest mite ectoparasites negatively affected fledgling haematocrit. The haematocrits of adults did not differ between sexes or years and in both sexes were unrelated to breeding date, body mass, age, clutch size or number of young reared. Females, but not males, caring for fledglings in nests infested by mites had a lower haematocrit than those rearing young in mite-free nests. The cross-fostering experiment indicated that almost all measured variation in haematocrit was explained by the nest where the bird was reared (67.2% of the explained variance), not by their nest of origin (7.8%), meaning that there was a very small, non-significant resemblance in the haematocrit of genetically related sibs when reared in different environments while unrelated nestlings reared in the same nestbox had similar haematocrits. The low proportion of variance explained by the familial component may be due to the high connection of haematocrit to fitness.
Bird Study | 2001
Juan A. Fargallo; Guillermo Blanco; Jaime Potti; Javier Viñuela
The breeding biology of the Eurasian Kestrel Falco tinnunculusin nestboxes in farmland was studied to test for differences between artificial and natural sites. We report on the direct effect of nestbox provisioning on some life-history traits and how nestbox use affects nest predation and parasitism. Five types of nest-sites were available: nestboxes on poles and trees (artificial sites), stick nests on trees, stick nests on pylons and holes in buildings (‘natural’ sites). The Kestrel population increased from 23 pairs in 1993 (prior to nestbox installation) to 55 in 1998 as nestboxes were provided. In general, pairs breeding in trees started to lay later than those nesting in nestboxes on poles or in building holes, but this difference was probably associated with habitat quality rather than nest type. Differences in clutch size were found between nest-sites in some years, and were associated with laying date and, probably, with variation in territory quality. Using only data from successful nests, pairs breeding in nestboxes produce more fledglings than those in building holes or pylons. The frequency of nest predation was higher in natural sites than in nestboxes. The number of fledglings from pairs breeding in nestboxes was higher than from those breeding in old stick nests in trees when all nests were considered. Nestbox provisioning had no effect on the occurrence of the ectoparasite Carnus hemapterus, but chicks from nestboxes showed higher intensity of infection. Our results suggest that nestbox provisioning increases reproductive success and the frequency of nest predation or intensity of parasite infestation in Kestrels.
Molecular Ecology | 2009
Paula K. Lehtonen; Toni Laaksonen; Aleksandr V. Artemyev; Eugen Belskii; Christiaan Both; Stanislav Bureš; A.V. Bushuev; Indrikis Krams; Juan Moreno; Marko Mägi; Andreas Nord; Jaime Potti; Pierre-Alain Ravussin; P.M. Sirkiä; Glenn-Peter Sætre; Craig R. Primmer
The pied flycatcher is one of the most phenotypically variable bird species in Europe. The geographic variation in phenotypes has often been attributed to spatial variation in selection regimes that is associated with the presence or absence of the congeneric collared flycatcher. Spatial variation in phenotypes could however also be generated by spatially restricted gene flow and genetic drift. We examined the genetic population structure of pied flycatchers across the breeding range and applied the phenotypic QST (PST)–FST approach to detect indirect signals of divergent selection on dorsal plumage colouration in pied flycatcher males. Allelic frequencies at neutral markers were found to significantly differ among populations breeding in central and southern Europe whereas northerly breeding pied flycatchers were found to be one apparently panmictic group of individuals. Pairwise differences between phenotypic (PST) and neutral genetic distances (FST) were positively correlated after removing the most differentiated Spanish and Swiss populations from the analysis, suggesting that genetic drift may have contributed to the observed phenotypic differentiation in some parts of the pied flycatcher breeding range. Differentiation in dorsal plumage colouration however greatly exceeded that observed at neutral genetic markers, which indicates that the observed pattern of phenotypic differentiation is unlikely to be solely maintained by restricted gene flow and genetic drift.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 1996
Jaime Potti; Santiago Merino
Hamilton & Zuk proposed that conspicuous male plumages of birds could be reliable signals of parasite resistance. We examined this prediction in a system involving blood trypanosomes in a passerine bird, the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca). Trypanosome prevalence and intensity of infections were unrelated to male age and expression of a secondary sexual trait. However, trypanosome infections were absent or maintained at significantly lower levels in females expressing a male trait which females have been shown to prefer in males. This relation held even after controlling for the significant effects that female age had on both the expression of the male trait and the rate of parasitism by trypanosomes. Given that the male trait is heritable and genetically correlated between the sexes, and there exists assortative mating based on white patch size and/or expression, a system of mutual mate choice may exist. In such a system, the benefits accrued to both males and females would be a higher chance of successful mating and the acquisition of genes for resistance to parasites to transmit to the offspring. These data thus support by an alternate route Hamilton & Zuk’s hypothesis on parasite-driven sexual selection.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 1999
Juan Moreno; Santiago Merino; Jaime Potti; Ana de León; Rosa Rodríguez
Abstract We manipulated parental work load without changing brood size in a population of pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca by removing two primaries (7 and 9) from each wing of females, thus reducing wing area and increasing flight costs. At other nests, we offered supplementary food in the form of live mealworms (10–20 g daily from hatching) to reduce brood demand and thus parental foraging costs. Other nests were left as controls. The daily energy expenditure of females feeding 12-day-old nestlings was measured with doubly labelled water D218O. Females in both treatments expended the same amount of energy, fed at the same rate and had similar body masses to birds in the control group. No effect of treatment on male mass and feeding effort was detected. More nestlings, however, died in nests of handicapped females. Nestlings of handicapped females had significantly lower body mass and haematocrit values than nestlings in food-supplemented nests, with nestlings in control nests occupying an intermediate position. The effects of both treatments on nestling mass, haematocrit values and mortality rates were only noticeable in nests infested with mites. Maternal energy expenditure is apparently constrained and offspring pay the costs imposed by reduced provisioning rate or increased demand caused by ectoparasites, while receiving benefits when food supply improves. The presumption that avian reproductive costs derive from changes in a flexible energy output may not be met in many cases.
Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 1997
Santiago Merino; Jaime Potti; Juan A. Fargallo
Sixteen species of passerine birds captured during a 2.5 yr period in Central Spain were examined for hematozoa. Haemoproteus spp., Leucocytozoon spp., Trypanosoma spp., Plasmodium spp., and microfilariae were observed. The most prevalent species were in the genus Leucocytozoon. The majority of the records are new for Spain and some represent new host records. More than one-half of the birds examined were infected with at least one parasite species. These records are similar to those reported from other areas in northern Europe and the Iberian Peninsula.