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Nocturnal activity of nesting shrubland and grassland passerines: Chapter 9

January 1, 2013

Nocturnal activity of nesting passerines is largely undocumented in field situations. We used video recordings to quantify sleep patterns of four shrubland and three grassland bird species during the nestling period. All species exhibited “back sleep” (bill tucked under scapular feathers); individuals woke frequently for vigils of their surroundings. Sleep-bout duration varied from 6 minutes (grasshopper sparrow) to 28 minutes (blue-winged warbler, field sparrow). Duration on nest varied from 6.4 hours (field sparrow) to 8.8 hours (indigo bunting). Adults woke 20–30 minutes before sunrise. First morning absence from the nest was short; nestlings were fed within 12 minutes of a parent’s departure. Further research is needed to understand energetic costs of sleep and behavioral adaptations to environmental pressures.

Publication Year 2013
Title Nocturnal activity of nesting shrubland and grassland passerines: Chapter 9
DOI 10.1525/california/9780520273139.003.0009
Authors Christy M. Slay, Kevin S. Ellison, Christine Ribic, Kimberly G. Smith, Carolyn M. Schmitz
Publication Type Book Chapter
Index ID 70173538
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coop Res Unit Leetown