E&E Seminar: Development and consequences of social dynamics in a long-lived raptor species

The use of social information is widespread among animals and can influence critical individual processes such as selecting foraging and breeding locations.

schedule Date & time
Date/time
29 Aug 2024 1:00pm - 29 Aug 2024 2:00pm
person Speaker

Speakers

Benedetta Catitti, Swiss Ornithological Institute
next_week Event series
contact_support Contact

Content navigation

Description

The use of social information is widespread among animals and can influence critical individual processes such as selecting foraging and breeding locations. Individual differences in the utilisation of social information can therefore have significant fitness consequences that scale up to shape the social and spatial structure of animal populations and well as their dynamics. However, investigating these mechanisms in natural populations is challenging, as it requires long-term individual data collection over large sample sizes. In this talk, I will first share some findings from my PhD, where I investigated the drivers and consequences of sociality in a long-lived European raptor species, the red kite (Milvus milvus). By combining a feeding experiment during nestling development with multi-year GPS-tracking of over 200 juvenile red kites we could investigate how early-life effects and intrinsic characteristics influence the emergence of social phenotypes that ultimately affect survival. In the final part of my talk, I will discuss my current work here at ANU as a visiting Postdoc with Prof. Farine, where I aim to gain a deeper understanding of how the use of social information shapes the spatial distribution of red kites.

Location

Please note: this seminar will be held in the Eucalyptus Rm and via Zoom, details are included below.

Eucalyptus Room, Rm S205, Level 2, RN Robertson Building (46)

Please click the link below to join the webinar:
https://anu.zoom.us/j/88691493552?pwd=GKiaFJj7ggWbgZQK9LBJwRD4vzooim.1

Passcode: 608140

Canberra time: please check your local time & date if you are watching from elsewhere.

Upcoming events in this series

Darren Wong
31 Jul 2025 | 1 - 2pm

Many flowering plants have evolved diverse strategies to communicate with and attract animal pollinators. We have discovered exciting new evidence for the role of anthocyanins and terpenes in the evolution of the highly diverse terrestrial orchid subtribe Caladeniinae (Diurideae).

View the event
Emily Stringer & Jarrod Sopniewski, UC
7 Aug 2025 | 1 - 2pm

This seminar is presented by Dr Emily Stringer and Dr Jarrod Sopniewski, Postdoctoral Research Fellows from the Centre for Conservation Ecology and Genomics at the University of Canberra.

View the event
Distinguished Prof Natalia Dudareva, Purdue University
11 Aug 2025 | 1 - 2pm

Plants synthesize an amazing diversity of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that facilitate interactions with their environment, ranging from attracting pollinators and seed dispersers to protecting themselves from pathogens, parasites, and herbivores.

View the event