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Dive into the research topics where Valentina Ferretti is active.

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Featured researches published by Valentina Ferretti.


The Condor | 2004

BREEDING DISPERSAL AND PHILOPATRY IN THE TREE SWALLOW

David W. Winkler; Peter H. Wrege; Paul E. Allen; Tracey L. Kast; Pixie Senesac; Matthew F. Wasson; Paulo E. Llambías; Valentina Ferretti; Patrick J. Sullivan

Abstract To study the patterns and determinants of philopatry and breeding dispersal in the Tree Swallow (Tachycineta bicolor) we analyzed the records of 356 males and 1459 females captured in more than one breeding year around Ithaca, New York. Of these captures, only 4% of male and 14% of female breeders dispersed to a new site for breeding. With our combination of intensive study areas in Tompkins County, New York, and the efforts of volunteer banders throughout New York and surrounding states, we could have detected dispersal in excess of 400 km from the initial breeding site. Randomization tests revealed, however, that breeders dispersed much shorter distances than they could have been detected. Detailed analyses of recaptures in Tompkins County showed that over a 22-km range of distances, the chances of dispersal to a new breeding site declined with the distance from the original breeding site. Females that failed to fledge any offspring were much more likely to disperse than females that reproduced successfully, and the probability of dispersal declined gradually with female age. The spatial scale in which swallows gather and process information appears to be much larger than for passerines that defend all-purpose territories. Dispersión Reproductiva y Filopatría en Tachycineta bicolor Resumen. Para estudiar los patrones y los determinantes de la filopatría y la dispersión reproductiva en Tachycineta bicolor analizamos los registros de 356 machos y 1459 hembras capturados en más de un año reproductivo en los alrededores de Ithaca, New York. De estas capturas, sólo el 4% de los machos y el 14% de las hembras reproductivas se dispersaron a un nuevo sitio de cría. Con nuestra combinación de áreas de estudio intensivas en el Condado de Tompkins, New York, y los esfuerzos de colaboradores voluntarios que anillaron aves a lo largo de New York y los estados circundantes, pudimos haber detectado eventos de dispersión a más de 400 km desde el sitio de cría inicial. Exámenes aleatorizados revelaron, sin embargo, que las aves reproductivas se dispersaron a distancias mucho más cortas que las que se podrían haber detectado. Análisis detallados de recapturas en el Condado de Tompkins mostraron que en un rango de distancias de 22 km, las probabilidades de dispersión a un nuevo sitio de cría disminuyeron con la distancia desde el sitio de cría original. Las hembras que fracasaron en la cría de pichones presentaron una probabilidad de dispersarse mucho mayor que las hembras que se reprodujeron exitosamente, y la probabilidad de dispersión disminuyó gradualmente con la edad de la hembra. La escala espacial a la que T. bicolor recoge y procesa información parece ser mucho más grande que la de aves paserinas que defienden territorios de uso múltiple.


Evolution | 2014

Spatiotemporally consistent genomic signatures of reproductive isolation in a moving hybrid zone

Scott A. Taylor; Robert L. Curry; Thomas A. White; Valentina Ferretti; Irby J. Lovette

Studies of hybrid zone dynamics often investigate a single sampling period and draw conclusions from that temporal snapshot. Stochasticity can, however, result in loci with spurious outlier patterns, which is exacerbated by limited temporal or geographic sampling. Comparing admixed populations from different geographic regions is one way to detect repeatedly divergent genomic regions potentially involved in reproductive isolation. Temporal comparisons also allow us to control partially for the role of stochasticity, but the power of temporal sampling has not yet been adequately explored. In North America, black‐capped (Poecile atricapillus) and Carolina (P. carolinensis) chickadees hybridize in a contact zone extending from New Jersey to Kansas. The hybrid zone is likely maintained by strong intrinsic selection against hybrids, and it is moving north. We used a reduced representation genomic approach and temporally spaced sampling—two samples of ∼80 individuals separated by a decade—to determine the pattern and consistency of selection and genomic introgression in the chickadee hybrid zone. We report consistently low introgression for highly divergent loci between P. atricapillus and P. carolinensis in this moving hybrid zone. This is strong evidence that these loci may be linked to genomic regions involved in reproductive isolation between chickadees.


Biological Conservation | 2004

Bird–habitat relationship for the declining Pampas meadowlark populations in the southern Pampas grasslands

Gustavo J. Fernández; Gabriela Posse; Valentina Ferretti; Fabián M. Gabelli

During the past century, the Pampas meadowlark Sturnella defilippii underwent a severe population drop and now, it is confined mostly to southern Pampas grasslands. We analyzed the habitat and landscape characteristics associated to the presence of reproductive groups of Pampas meadowlarks in this area. During the 1999 breeding season, we surveyed 89 randomly stratified selected points where we noted the presence/absence of Pampas meadowlarks. For each point we estimated seven habitat variables related to vegetation cover and six landscape variables derived from different maps. We found 11 groups of displaying males, nine of them on natural grassland plots. Multivariate analyses indicate that field type and vegetation cover are the main factors associated to the presence of Pampas meadowlark. Reproductive groups were found preferentially at natural grasslands with high vegetation cover. Habitat loss and intensive grazing of fields appear to be the main factors associated to their sharp population decline and distribution retraction.


Oryx | 2004

Range contraction in the pampas meadowlark Sturnella defilippii in the southern pampas grasslands of Argentina

Fabián M. Gabelli; Gustavo J. Fernández; Valentina Ferretti; Gabriela Posse; Eugenio Coconier; Hernán J. Gavieiro; Paulo E. Llambías; Pablo I. Peláez; María L. Vallés; Pablo L. Tubaro

The Vulnerable Pampas meadowlark Sturn- ella defilippii (Family Icteridae) is a Neotropical grassland bird that suffered a severe population reduction and range contraction during the 20th century. Formerly dis- tributed across most of the pampas grasslands, it is now confined to the southern tip of its original range. There are small groups of wintering birds in southern Brazil, a small reproductive population in eastern Uruguay, and the main reproductive population occurs on the southern pampas grasslands of Argentina. In this paper we report the results of an extensive field survey of these southern pampas grasslands, carried out to estimate the pampas meadowlarks population size and to iden- tify the factors potentially responsible for its range con- traction. During the 1999 breeding season we surveyed a total of 296 sample locations (transects, randomly selected points, and sites checked for nesting site re-occupation).We found 66 reproductive groups of pampas meadowlarks. The minimum population size and extent of occurrence were estimated to be 28,000 individuals and 4,810 km 2 , respectively. This value repre- sents a range contraction of c. 30% compared to that estimated in a study carried out between 1992 and 1996. Pampas meadowlarks re-occupied natural grassland sites for nesting that were used in previous breeding seasons when these sites remained undisturbed. Habitat transformation appears to be the main factor causing the range contraction of the pampas meadowlark. We suggest that long-term monitoring of this population and its preferred habitat, the natural grasslands, is required in order to ensure the conservation of this species.


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2009

Isolation and characterization of microsatellite markers from three species of swallows in the genus Tachycineta: T. albilinea, T. bicolor and T. leucorrhoa.

C. A. Makarewich; Laura M. Stenzler; Valentina Ferretti; David W. Winkler; Irby J. Lovette

We describe 30 microsatellite loci developed from three species of swallows in the genus Tachycineta: T. bicolor (tree swallow), T. albilinea (mangrove swallow), and T. leucorrhoa (white‐rumped swallow). These commonly studied birds nest in secondary cavities and are distributed from Alaska to Argentina. Primer pairs were designed for each species individually and tested for cross‐amplification in 40–48 individuals of all three species. Polymorphism ranged from 5 to 65 alleles per locus (mean = 19.1). These markers will allow comparative studies of extra‐pair paternity rates among members of the genus as well as the assessment of population structure.


The Wilson Journal of Ornithology | 2009

Breeding success and social mating system of the Bay-capped Wren-Spinetail (Spartonoica maluroides).

Paulo E. Llambías; Valentina Ferretti; Daniel Augusto Cardoni; Jesús E. Maldonado

Abstract We studied breeding biology, parental roles, and social mating system of the Bay-capped Wren-Spinetail (Spartonoica maluroides), a habitat specialist furnariid, in the Argentinean pampas. We found 42 nests during 2004–2007, two during egg laying, 28 during incubation, and 12 with nestlings. Mean clutch size was 3.17 eggs (n  =  29), the incubation period was 13 days, and nestlings remained in the nest for 12 days before fledgling. Bay-capped Wren-Spinetails are socially monogamous; both males and females develop a brood patch and contribute to incubation, brooding, and provisioning of nestlings. Wren-Spinetails are unique among furnariids as they build an open cup nest with a few presenting a loose domed roof. Breeding success of Bay-capped Wren-Spinetails was higher (total probability of nesting success  =  0.508) than other species of sympatric passerines because of low nest predation and high nest survival rates during incubation and nestling rearing stages.


The Wilson Journal of Ornithology | 2003

Parental Care in the Great Kiskadee

Paulo E. Llambías; Valentina Ferretti

Abstract We studied parental care in the Great Kiskadee (Pitangus sulphuratus) in a suburban residential area in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina, from September through December, 1998. Our data suggest that the dominant breeding system of the Great Kiskadees on our study site is social monogamy. Both male and female were involved in territory defense, nest building, and feeding the young. The female alone incubated the eggs and brooded the nestlings. Male and female visitation rates to the nest during the nestling period were similar.


The Wilson Journal of Ornithology | 2001

Kleptoparasitism in the Great Kiskadee

Paulo E. Llambías; Valentina Ferretti; Pablo S. Rodríguez

Abstract Kleptoparasitism has been extensively described for raptors and seabirds, but there are fewer observations for passerine birds. Here we describe several events of interspecific kleptoparasitism in the Great Kiskadee (Tyrannidae: Pitangus sulphuratus) in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Although interspecific kleptoparasitism has not been described previously for this species, we believe this foraging strategy is more common than expected for a passerine bird. The observations described in this paper are consistent with four of the six ecological conditions proposed by Brockmann and Barnard (1979).


Current Biology | 2014

Climate-Mediated Movement of an Avian Hybrid Zone

Scott A. Taylor; Thomas A. White; Wesley M. Hochachka; Valentina Ferretti; Robert L. Curry; Irby J. Lovette


Behavioral Ecology | 2011

Heterozygosity and fitness benefits of extrapair mate choice in White-rumped Swallows (Tachycineta leucorrhoa)

Valentina Ferretti; Viviana Massoni; Florencia Bulit; David W. Winkler; Irby J. Lovette

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Florencia Bulit

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Viviana Massoni

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Fabián M. Gabelli

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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