Marcela Osorio-Beristain
Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marcela Osorio-Beristain.
The Condor | 2008
J. Jordan Price; lAilA yUnes-JiMénez; Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Kevin E. Omland; Troy G. Murphy
Abstract Birds in which both sexes produce complex song are more common in the tropics than in the temperate north, where typically only males sing. Yet surprisingly little is known about female song characteristics in most tropical species. Here we present a comparison of female and male singing behaviors in the Streak-backed Oriole (Icterus pustulatus), a tropical songbird in which both sexes perform solo songs. Females sing much more frequently than males and produce songs with similar acoustic complexity. Rates of singing by both sexes were higher during breeding than postbreeding while the rates of most other vocalizations did not change, suggesting that song plays an important role in breeding. To our knowledge, this is the first reported species in which females regularly sing at higher rates than males; however, few studies have examined female song in other sexually monomorphic or weakly dimorphic species, so such patterns might not be unique.
Brain Behavior and Evolution | 2010
Zachary J. Hall; Scott A. MacDougall-Shackleton; Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Troy G. Murphy
The song control system is a group of discrete interconnected nuclei found in the brains of all songbirds (suborder Passeri). Previous studies have reported a positive relationship between sex differences in song nucleus volumes and sex differences in song behavior across numerous songbird species, with species exhibiting greater sex differences in behavior also exhibiting greater sex differences in the brain. This body of comparative research, however, has failed to incorporate data from a bird species in which females sing more than males. In this study, we examine song nucleus volumes in both sexes of the streak-backed oriole (Icterus pustulatus), a New World blackbird with a female bias in song rate and similar song complexity between the sexes. Results from this neuroanatomical analysis are contrary to what was to be expected from previous research: despite the female bias in song rate, males have a significantly larger HVC and area X song nucleus volumes. Specifically, male HVC was 75% larger than that of females, and male area X was 64% larger than that of females. There was no significant sex difference in the size of the nucleus robustus arcopallialis. The lack of a positive relationship between song nuclei and singing behavior in these orioles demonstrates that our current understanding of song modulation via the song control system may be overly reliant on basic measures such as total volumes.
Behaviour | 2013
Diana Pérez-Staples; Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Cristina Rodríguez; Hugh Drummond
The behaviour that mediates divorce and partner change in socially monogamous species is largely unstudied and unknown, although roles and adaptive functions in some birds have been inferred from breeding outcomes, partial behavioural records and captive studies. Here, roles and functions of natural within-season mate switching of a colonial bird were characterized by describing interactions over many days during the whole daylight period. Switching occurred in 5.9% of bluefooted booby pairs and was initiated by desertion of males or, less commonly, females. Three male desertions were consistent with either the Errors of Mate Choice or Incompatibility hypotheses but were better explained by our new Unfaithful Mate hypothesis because infidelity of the mate preceded desertion. Another two male desertions were more consistent with the Better Options hypothesis because the males switched to their ongoing extra-pair (EP) partners. One female desertion was consistent with the Errors of Mate choice or Incompatibility hypotheses, and another with the Better Options hypothesis. All five deserted females switched promptly to their EP partners. Thus, most switches consisted of (1) males replacing a possibly unsatisfactory partner with an ew (already identif ied or to be identif ied) partner, or (2) deserted females pairing with their EP partners.
Annales De La Societe Entomologique De France | 2009
Cecilia Torres; Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Nestor A. Mariano
abstract Tropical dry forest, such as that found in Mexico, is a biome where very few alimentary resources are available during 6 months of the year. Within some families of Lepidoptera such as Nymphalidae, some species are known to survive the dry season as adults using the few decayed pulp fruits available as a food source. We compared the temporal abundance and sex ratio of two model species, one belonging to the subfamily Charaxinae, found world-wide, and one belonging to the subfamily Biblidinae, endemic to the Americas. We used baited traps to measure feeding frequency of both species to asses monthly temporal resource use curves. The butterfly frequency of feeding drops dramatically in the dry season for all species-gender, except for females of the Biblidinae species. There are few differences between the sexes in the relative feeding frequency, assimilated to activity pattern, of Charaxinae between the dry and rainy seasons, while the activity pattern of Biblidinae is very different depending on the sex. These results suggest differential consequences on mate choice competition for both species. Females of the Charaxine species showed a use curve nested on the male curve, while for all other pair-wise comparisons between gender-species, the use curves were significantly different. These differences in the temporal foraging pattern could explain at least in part, the coexistence between both sympatric species in the stressful season.
Western North American Naturalist | 2009
Dolores Reyes; Raúl E. Alcalá; Dulce Arias; Marcela Osorio-Beristain
ABSTRACT. Because of their high dispersal abilities, birds are expected to manifest marked genetic structuring only at relatively large geographic scales. However, it is not well known how factors like nest site fidelity in a largely resident species could limit gene flow and increase genetic structuring in birds. In this study we use RAPD markers to estimate genetic structuring in a strongly sedentary species of the American tropics, the Russet crowned Motmot (Momotus mexicanus), within a tropical dry forest in central Mexico. Genetic structuring was assessed among 3 populations separated by a mean distance of only 25 km. We report that 12.9% of the total genetic variation is explained by differences among sites, which is quite high for a bird at this geographic scale. We propose that high nest site fidelity, brought on by a scarcity of suitable nest substrates, may be responsible for high genetic structuring in this species.
Western North American Naturalist | 2017
Grégory Michaël Charre; Omar Paniagua; Marcela Osorio-Beristain
Abstract. Burrow-nesting birds are limited by access to nest sites, particularly in years of very high humidity levels, such those seen with El Niño, or in forests that are fragmented due to the effects of human activity. We assessed the breeding success of Momotus mexicanus nesting along the earth bank of a secondary road corridor in a seasonally dry tropical forest in Central Mexico. We monitored 28 nests during the reproductive period and characterized the composition of the soil where they were constructed, as well as other physical variables. One nest produced 2 fledglings, and the other 27 failed to produce any: 46% of the nests experienced flooding or wall collapses, while the nests built on sandy loam soil remained intact. We also report other basic natural history variables for these neotropical burrow-nesting birds.
Behavioral Ecology | 2009
Troy G. Murphy; Diego Hernández-Muciño; Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Robert Montgomerie; Kevin E. Omland
The Auk | 1993
Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Hugh Drummond
Forest Ecology and Management | 2011
Cristina Martínez-Garza; Marcela Osorio-Beristain; David Valenzuela-Galván; Alondra Nicolás-Medina
Ethology | 2006
Marcela Osorio-Beristain; Diana Pérez-Staples; Hugh Drummond