Abstract

The female Black‐and‐white Casqued Hornbill Bycanistes subcylindricus uses mud to seal herself into a nest cavity and remains there until the nesting attempt has ended. The male hornbill is solely responsible for food provisioning and external defence of the nest. Data on hornbill nests in a Ugandan rain forest were used to test Martindale's (1982) model of nest defence and central place foraging. As predicted, nest guarding by the resident male hornbill during intrusions by conspecifics altered foraging patterns; the resident male foraged closer to the nest, made a larger number of shorter visits, and brought smaller food loads. There was a significant change in size composition of fruits brought before, during, and after intrusions. For short intrusions, the volumes of food brought per unit time did not change. However, if intrusions lasted for days or weeks, food delivery rates declined. Nest‐sealing by the Black‐and‐white Casqued Hornbill appears to function primarily to protect the nest from conspecifics rather than from interspecific predators.

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