Resumen:
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[EN] Timing of reproduction is a critical life-history trait and implies major fitness consequences. Differences in life history strategies can lead to different responses to the same environmental conditions even among ...[+]
[EN] Timing of reproduction is a critical life-history trait and implies major fitness consequences. Differences in life history strategies can lead to different responses to the same environmental conditions even among closely related species. Investigating the factors affecting the timing of reproduction in closely related and sympatric species may help understanding the relationship between different life history traits and species-specific responses to ecological factors. We investigated the effects of season (photoperiod), local climatic variability and prey abundance on the breeding season of two sympatric insectivorous birds that differ in the timing of reproduction and moult and have different migration strategies: the Moustached Warbler Acrocephalus melanopogon and the Eurasian Reed-warbler Acrocephalus scirpaceus. During a five-year period, breeding phenology was determined by examining bird incubation patches during standardised captures and food availability was assessed by invertebrate sampling. Time, mean temperatures and the abundance of some prey taxa were inter-correlated and all contributed to influence the breeding phenology of both species according to partial least squares regression analysis. Besides some interspecific differences in the effect of environmental factors on the breeding phenology, we found strong similarities between the patterns observed in the two warblers. This suggests that, in spite of interspecific differences in life history, the ecological mechanisms shaping reproduction phenology are similar in the two warblers and the same environmental factors are involved in determining the timing of their reproduction.
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Agradecimientos:
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We are grateful to G. Assandri, D. Beneyto, M. Delandes, P. Lucio, M. Marin, M. Morganti, r. Oliver, r. Piculo, E. Pons, r. Sanchez-Serrano and D. Vidal for their help with the fieldwork, and to S. Ano, n. Ibanez, I.J. ...[+]
We are grateful to G. Assandri, D. Beneyto, M. Delandes, P. Lucio, M. Marin, M. Morganti, r. Oliver, r. Piculo, E. Pons, r. Sanchez-Serrano and D. Vidal for their help with the fieldwork, and to S. Ano, n. Ibanez, I.J. Minana, L. Soler and J. Villarroya for their help in counting and classifying invertebrates. we would like to thank the authorities of the Marjal de Pego-Oliva natural Park and the 'Servei de Conservacio de la Biodiversitat de la Generalitat Valenciana' for providing the facilities to work in protected areas, and also the relevant permits. we thank the 'Agencia Estatal de Meteorologia' for providing the climatic data. we are grateful to two anonymous referees for valuable comments that considerably improved the manuscript. The present work has been financed by Project CGL2010-21933/CO2-02 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and Project CGL2016-78260-P of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness. Francesco Ceresa was supported by an `Atraent talent' grant from the University of Valencia.
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