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      Monk parakeet invasion success: a role for nest thermoregulation and bactericidal potential of plant nest material?

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      Biological Invasions
      Springer Nature

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          Ecological immunology: costly parasite defences and trade-offs in evolutionary ecology

          In the face of continuous threats from parasites, hosts have evolved an elaborate series of preventative and controlling measures - the immune system - in order to reduce the fitness costs of parasitism. However, these measures do have associated costs. Viewing an individual's immune response to parasites as being subject to optimization in the face of other demands offers potential insights into mechanisms of life history trade-offs, sexual selection, parasite-mediated selection and population dynamics. We discuss some recent results that have been obtained by practitioners of this approach in natural and semi-natural populations, and suggest some ways in which this field may progress in the near future.
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            Climate change increases the likelihood of catastrophic avian mortality events during extreme heat waves.

            Severe heat waves have occasionally led to catastrophic avian mortality in hot desert environments. Climate change models predict increases in the intensity, frequency and duration of heat waves. A model of avian evaporative water requirements and survival times during the hottest part of day reveals that the predicted increases in maximum air temperatures will result in large fractional increases in water requirements (in small birds, equivalent to 150-200 % of current values), which will severely reduce survival times during extremely hot weather. By the 2080s, desert birds will experience reduced survival times much more frequently during mid-summer, increasing the frequency of catastrophic mortality events.
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              Nesting success of understory forest birds in central Panama

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biological Invasions
                Biol Invasions
                Springer Nature
                1387-3547
                1573-1464
                May 2016
                February 8 2016
                May 2016
                : 18
                : 5
                : 1305-1315
                Article
                10.1007/s10530-016-1068-7
                2226f254-bac9-4eb7-bb48-c78393bb2195
                © 2016

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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