Sometimes it pays to have big, bad neighbors. Weighing in at about 3 grams, black-chinned hummingbirds (Archilochus alexandri)
can do little but stand by and watch Mexican jays 40 times their weight
chow down on their eggs. So in the mountains of southeastern Arizona,
the hummers have learned to build their nests near goshawk and Cooper’s
hawk nests (Accipiter gentilis and Accipiter cooperii).
Almost five times bigger than the jays (Amphelocoma wollweberi),
the hawks enjoy these birds for lunch. So to avoid hawks swooping down
and surprising them, the jays only forage above the hawks’ nests. Thus a
cone-shaped safe zone exists below the 20-meter-high hawk nests,
extending out about 100 meters, researchers report today in Science Advances.
Of 342 hummer nests studied over three years, 80% were near hawk
nests—and for good reason. The researchers monitored hummingbird egg and
fledgling survival near six active and six inactive hawk nests. Those
hummers unlucky enough to be near inactive nests lost all but 8% of
their young, while those in a “good” neighborhood had a 70% success
rate, they report. Hawks could eat the hummingbirds, but these morsels
are too small and agile to be worth the effort, the researchers note.
This phenomenon, in which one species is changing the behavior of
another and benefitting a third species is called a trait-mediated
trophic cascade, and is similar to what happened in Yellowstone National
Park when the introduction of wolves changed the behavior of elk, which
may have benefited shrubs and trees that the elk fed on.
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