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  1. Experimental Analysis of Nest-Site Choice and its Relationship to Nest Success in an Open-Cup–Nesting Passerine

    Nest placement presumably reflects selection for secure sites to minimize failure. Most tests of this hypothesis, however, have failed to support it. We used artificial nests (ARTs) to experimentally evaluate...

  2. Nest Success and Nesting Habits of Eastern Kingbirds and Other Flycatchers

    Patterns of nest placement and its relationship to nest success in the Eastern Kingbird (Tyrannus tyrannus) were studied in populations breeding in New York and Kansas. Data were augmented with information on...

  3. High Frequency of Extra-Pair Paternity in Eastern Kingbirds

    Genetic parentage in the socially monogamous and territorial Eastern Kingbird( Tyrannust tyrannus) was examined in a central New York population by multilocus DNA fingerprinting. Extra-pair young were...

  4. Body Size and Condition, Timing of Breeding, and Aspects of Egg Production in Eastern Kingbirds

    Variation in timing of breeding in Eastern Kingbirds (Tyrannus tyrannus) was correlated only weakly with external morphological characters, but was correlated positively and significantly with estimates of body...

  5. The Impact of Weather on Kingbird Foraging Behavior

    Foraging data on Eastern Kingbirds (Tyrannus tyrannus) were collected during the early breeding season in eastern Kansas to test the hypothesis that foraging rate and other aspects of foraging behavior vary...

  6. Clutch Size in the Eastern Kingbird: Factors Affecting Nestling Survival

    Observational and experimental procedures were used to evaluate the potential importance of brood size and weather on the evolution of clutch size in the Eastern Kingbird. Modal clutch size was three eggs, yet...

  7. Nest Reuse by Eastern Kingbirds: Adaptive Behavior or Ecological Constraint?

    The reuse of old nests by open-cup nesting passerines is a seemingly rare but potentially adaptive behavior if, as a consequence, females begin to breed earlier, lay larger clutches, or fledge more young. We...

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