Publications by authors named "Dorota Kidawa"

Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines parental coordination in Dovekies (Little Auks) throughout their breeding season, emphasizing the shift from traditional views of parental care as influenced mostly by sexual conflict to understanding it as collaboration between males and females.
  • - Researchers utilized video recordings over two breeding seasons to analyze how parental coordination varies during different stages, finding that coordination is high during incubation but decreases during chick rearing, with variations between years.
  • - Results indicate that parental coordination is influenced by the needs of the brood and is not a fixed behavior, with a significant relationship observed between the coordination levels during incubation and chick rearing phases.
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Animal vocalisations can often inform conspecifics about the behavioural context of production and the underlying affective states, hence revealing whether a situation should be approached or avoided. While this is particularly important for socially complex species, little is known about affective expression in wild colonial animals, and even less to about their young. We studied vocalisations of the little auk (Alle alle) chicks in the Hornsund breeding colony, Svalbard.

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Source-filter theory posits that an individual's size and vocal tract length are reflected in the parameters of their calls. In species that mate assortatively, this could result in vocal similarity. In the context of mate selection, this would mean that animals could listen in to find a partner that sounds-and therefore is-similar to them.

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Article Synopsis
  • Individual recognition (IR) abilities in birds develop from ecological and evolutionary factors, especially in species where misidentification can be detrimental.
  • The little auk (Alle alle) was used to study IR through assessments of chick calls at various nesting stages and by cross-fostering chicks to observe acceptance rates.
  • Findings revealed significant differences in chick calls and that all cross-fostered chicks were accepted by foster parents, indicating a need for further research on how individual chick recognition functions during and after fledging.
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Many seabird species breed in colonies counting up to hundreds of thousands of individuals. Life in such crowded colonies might require special coding-decoding systems to reliably convey information through acoustic cues. This can include, for example, developing complex vocal repertoires and adjusting the properties of their vocal signals to communicate behavioural contexts, and thus regulate social interactions with their conspecifics.

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Article Synopsis
  • Foraging success of chick-rearing seabirds, particularly the little auk in the Arctic, is mainly influenced by food availability and environmental factors like wind speed.
  • Research conducted from 2015 to 2019 in Svalbard showed that increased wind speeds can significantly impact the accessibility of preferred prey, such as the cold-water copepod Calanus glacialis.
  • Despite challenges presented by varying wind and food conditions, little auks demonstrated resilience by maintaining high breeding success, highlighting the necessity of factoring in wind conditions when studying seabird foraging behavior.
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Studies on time allocation of various activities are crucial to understand which behavioural strategy is the most profitable in a given context, and so why animals behave in a particular way. Such investigations usually focus on a time window when the studied activity is performed, often neglecting how the time devoted to focal activity affects time allocation to following-up behaviours, while that may have its own fitness consequences. In this study, we examined time allocation into three post-foraging activities (entering the nest with food, nest attendance, and colony attendance) in a small seabird species, the little auk (Alle alle).

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Using GPS-tracked individuals, we compared foraging ecology and reproductive output of a High-Arctic zooplanktivorous seabird, the little auk Alle alle, between three years differing in environmental conditions (sea surface temperature). Despite contrasting environmental conditions, average foraging fights distance and duration were generally similar in all studied years. Also, in all years foraging locations visited by the little auk parents during short trips (ST, for chick provisioning) were significantly closer to the colony compared to those visited during long trips (LTs, mainly for adults' self-maintenance).

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Due to deposition of birds' guano, eggshells or feathers, the vicinity of a large seabirds' breeding colony is expected to have a substantial impact on the soil's physicochemical features as well as on diversity of vegetation and the soil invertebrates. Consequently, due to changing physicochemical features the structure of bacterial communities might fluctuate in different soil environments. The aim of this study was to investigate the bacterial assemblages in the Arctic soil within the area of a birds' colony and in a control sample from a topographically similar location but situated away from the colony's impact area.

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Svalbard reindeer (Rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) is a non-migratory subspecies of reindeer inhabiting the high-arctic archipelago of Svalbard. In contrast to other Rangifer tarandus subspecies, Svalbard reindeer graze exclusively on natural sources of food and have no chance of ingestion of any crops. We report the use of a non-invasive method for analysis of fecal microbiome by means of sequencing the 16S rDNA extracted from the fecal microbiota of R.

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The diet of the red fox Vulpes vulpes was investigated in five regions of northeastern Poland by stomach content analysis of 224 foxes collected from hunters. The red fox is expected to show the opportunistic feeding habits. Our study showed that foxes preyed mainly on wild prey, with strong domination of Microtus rodents, regardless of sex, age, month and habitat.

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