Abstract

Many animals build new nests every breeding season instead of saving time by reusing old ones. One hypothesis is that nest reuse leads to increased predation risk if predators memorize nest locations and revisit these sites. Here we examine patterns in the prevalence of facultative nest reuse. Further, we relate nest reuse and timing of breeding to nest predation risk, clutch size and nestling survival. We analyse 1570 breeding attempts of the Eurasian sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus) from Denmark (1977–1997) and from two sites in Norway (1985–2017). The probability of reuse varied between study areas, increased in replacement clutches, and was lower in adults compared to 1-year-old breeders. Pairs reusing nests laid their first egg on average 2.6 ± 1.0 SE days later than those building new nests, suggesting they are compensating for an already late breeding schedule. Indeed, reuse increased nest predation risk, but we discovered no other productive effects of reuse. In non-predated nests, late breeders had both smaller clutches and lower nestling survival. We propose that nest predation is a contributing driver to the behaviour of building a new nest each year, whereas nest reuse is a strategy to compensate for delayed onset of breeding, mainly used by inexperienced males.

Highlights

  • The nest is a prerequisite for breeding in a wide range of animals

  • Apart from nest predation, we studied other effects on productivity by examining how clutch size and survival of nestlings were affected by reuse, clutch replacement and timing of breeding in non-predated nests

  • We found that the level of nest reuse varied across our study areas

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Summary

Introduction

The nest is a prerequisite for breeding in a wide range of animals. It is relevant for avian species, which use nests for protecting their eggs and nestlings (Hansell 2000). While the nest construction process pose a pre-laying investment, a new nest is usually built annually even if old Communicated by Ola Olsson. Nest predation is the primary cause of breeding failure in avian species, posing a strong evolutionary pressure (Martin 1995). New-built nests are usually relocated (but within the same breeding site or territory), and its new location is suggested to trick local predators that revisit memorized nests (Sonerud and Fjeld 1987; Sonerud 1985, 1993). While the generality of these findings is still not thoroughly

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