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The evolution of organisms leads to the elimination of behaviors that are costly in terms of energy. One of such behaviors in the Tree Sparrow Passer montanus is the autumn display during which these birds construct nests. The purpose of this paper is to find out if this behavior is a part of the strategy for winter survival.The study of Tree Sparrows was conducted near Warsaw, Central Poland. During the breeding season, nest boxes were checked to record the presence of Tree Sparrow nests. Before the autumn display, breeding nests were dyed in order to identify nest material added in the period of autumn display. Nestlings in nest boxes, juveniles, and adults captured in mist-nets were banded with different combinations of color bands to identify their age during visual observations in the period of autumn sexual display. Juveniles and adults caught in mist-nets were classified as molted or not molted birds. In winter, nest boxes were checked to catch the birds roosting in them at night. Autumnal sexual display in Tree Sparrows is similar to the spring display. Both adults and juveniles leave the breeding colony in August and return after molt. They form pairs, copulate and build nests in fall. The autumn display is continued from the first ten days of September to early November. The number of Tree Sparrows participating in the autumn display increases with the percentage of the birds that completed molt in the population. In the first half of September, 16% of the population completed molt, while 99% in mid-October. On the average, adult birds formed pairs on 11 September (SD: 7.7 days), and juveniles on 17 September (SD: 8.0 days). Nest construction was started, on the average, 14.2±8.7 days after pairing. The advance in nest building was dependent on the time of pair formation. Intensive nest building took place in the last 10-days period of September and in October. Early in November, nest building ceased with the onset of cool weather. The last birds to pair did not construct complete autumn nests and in winter they roosted in shrubs or in tree crowns . The building of autumn nest as a consequence of the autumn display, serving as a roosting place in winter, can be a consequence of natural selection promoting this behaviour.
In the commune of Łomianki near Warsaw, Poland (52°20'N, 20°50 'E), 12 samples of at least 19 nests we collected from wooden nest boxes between 1995-1999. The samples were unevenly distributed among months, but in total they represented each month of the year. In total 386 nests were analysed, including 283 of the tree sparrow (Passer montanus), 30 of the house sparrow (P. domesticus) and 73 nests of the genus Passer, but unidentified species. Using the Tullgren apparatus, 7692 imago fleas of 8 species were extracted from these nests. Only Ceratophyllus gallinae and C. fringillae were sufficiently abundant to analyse changes in their numbers. The number of C. gallinae was about 3.1 times higher than of C. fringillae. The abundance, prevalence and dominance of the two flea species were analysed in the annual cycle. Adult forms of the two flea species were leasl abundant in nests in April. Their numbers increased between May and July, slightly decreased in August and rapidly increased in September and October, reaching the maxima in all the indices, except for the dominance in the community of nest fauna. C. fringillae dominated in March and C. gallinae in September. In the winter months, adult C. gallinae occurred in relatively large numbers. In the nests of tree sparrow, fleas probably produced at least two and possible even three generations.
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