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            | Weighing and Observing Birds: Automatic Data Recording and Processing 
 Psztor Erzsbet, Cristopher M. Perrins*, Tth Zoltn
 ELTE Genetikai Tanszk, *Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology, Deptartment
 of Zoology, University of Oxford
 
 We discussed techniques for the automated observation of (free living) birds
 that allow behavioural and ecological parameters to be measured. The method in
 focus was observation by weighing. We were also interested to see the special
 potentials of the combination of different observation techniques.
 
 In the last decades there were a few dozens of studies that involved weighing
 individuals at nests or on perches to collect data on body weight changes and
 visiting activities of a number of different bird species. The weighed object,
 which is the place visited regularly by the observed animals, may be a
 nest(box), an artificial perch or feeder. Consequently researchers can use the
 method to investigate bird species that nest in boxes (Great Tit Parus major,
 Crimson Rosella Platycercus elegans), on platforms (e.g. on buildings; Blackbird
 Turdus merula, Black Redstart  Phoenicurus ochruros), in burrows (Sand Martin
 Riparia riparia), or on the ground (Lapwing Vanellus, Antarctic Petrel
 Thalassoica antarctica);  or those frequenting a perch (Red-backed Shrike Lanius
 collurio);  or those accepting food provided by a feeder (European Starling
 Sturnus vulgaris). Moreover, it was possible to measure birds that are visiting
 on foot: penguins at the "gate" to their colony or kiwis at the entrance to
 their nest burrow. The activity during which weights are measured may be nest
 building, egg laying, incubation, courtship feeding, brooding, nestling feeding,
 fledging;  or singing, foraging, resting at a perch;  or the feeding intensity
 and the dominance relations at a feeder.
 
 Computers and electronic balances offered a higher level of automation for these
 measurements. Data may be recorded by a local computer (e.g. palmtop) beside
 each balance, or by one central computer connected to the balances by long
 cables or by radio transmission. The central computer provides effective
 supervisory control over the observations.
 
 However, a relatively complete software package has been developed only
 recently, aiming to support not only automated, non-stop, long-run data
 collection but also to reduce the tremendous work required by the processing of
 the resulting floods of data which is needed to extract variables for
 statistical analyses. Zoltn Tth developed "The Wisitor" software for weighing
 nests and he collected data on breeding attempts in ten bird species, including
 tits, sparrows, starlings and blackbirds. Parts of the software were used in
 Oxford (Richard Woodburn, Robin McCleery), Canberra (Elsie Krebs) and
 Nyregyhza (Tibor Szp).
 
 Data recording in "The Wisitor" weighing system is done on the basis of event
 recognition. Two series of weighing results are stored (pre-event and post-event
 series) at each arrival and departure. Data processing modules estimate the
 weight levels and their measurement error from the recorded raw data and build
 the visit records. The high-level support of data processing includes automated
 calculations with adjustable parameters, interactive graphs, automated
 identification of the two parents from the body weights of the visitors, and
 several output files with different data structures. Visit records contain
 identification (male/female), time of arrival and of departure, length of in and
 out bouts, body weight, load weight, delta parent weight.
 
 A crucial feature of this measuring system is the potential of estimating the
 measurement error from the recorded weight series. This addresses a generally
 overlooked problem: Weighing moving objects under field conditions imposes a
 significant error on the measurements of small quantities. In order to detect
 differences between those (e.g. the average load sizes of individuals, nests,
 territories) it is essential to find and exclude the bad measurements and in
 turn reduce the average measurement error of the remaining data set. Tth and
 Psztor, with the help of Evert Meelis (Leiden), created a numeric method to
 estimate a major component of the measurement error for each weighing series.
 Filtering the data with an error limit yields more reliable estimations of both
 load weights and body-weight changes between consecutive visits.
 
 These weight variables can be used to define rough behavioural acts as foraging
 trip with or without self-feeding, which form the basis of an analysis of
 parental foraging behaviour. For instance, the minimum amount of the collected
 food and its allocation between nestling- and self-feeding can be assessed. The
 time budgets of the observed birds can be reconstructed from the acts for entire
 nesting periods. However, without additional measurements, the energy budgets of
 the parent birds cannot be reconstructed from continuous weighing, as it was
 pointed out by Sally Ward (Aberdeen).
 
 Ruedi Nager (Glasgow) warned that body composition of birds may change with
 environmental conditions without being reflected in changes in body mass. Gulls
 which were experimentally manipulated to lay one additional egg lost a small,
 but significant amount of protein from their flight muscles. This effect is
 small compared to the natural variation in mass, but it had very important
 consequences on the bird's ability to raise young.
 
 Visual observation - the most traditional direct observation method - can
 provide information on the behaviour of visitors beyond visiting activity, and
 what's more also on the behaviour of resident individuals, like nestlings,
 including interactions. When some load is involved in the observed activity
 (e.g. feeding) it can give information on the volume (length, width) and the
 identity of the cargo (e.g. classification of prey). Direct observation,
 however, may be too time-consuming or practically unrealizable, especially when
 it's used long term, for example supplementing some automated observation.
 Taking pictures in an automated fashion can overcome not only these problems but
 it can increase the reliability and the resolution of the visually obtained
 data. Pictures may allow subtle identification of individuals and items (e.g.
 prey) and measuring the exact size of those. The drawback is that pictures are
 restricted in many ways (angle, focus) compared to direct observation.
 Robin McCleery told about the Oxford study on Great and Blue Tits (Parus
 caeruleus) that included monitoring nests both by automated weighing ("The
 Wisitor") and by automated photography, simultaneously. The head and beak load
 of the entering parent was photographed at each visit, using a Super-8 mm cine
 camera with single-frame film-advance and flash synchronization, triggered by a
 micro-switch at the entrance hole. The sex of parent, the number and type of
 prey delivered (often to species level) and the time were determined. The
 records allowed detailed analyses of the diets of nestlings between day 4 and
 fledging. Sample size for feeding activity data was increased by nest visit
 counters that were triggered by the depression of a micro-switch wire each time
 a bird passed through the entrance hole of the nest box.
 
 Marcel Lambrechts (Montpellier) used video cameras and metal detectors to obtain
 information about the feeding frequencies of tit parents. The time of the visit,
 the volume and length of the prey, and its type (caterpillars, spiders,
 grasshoppers) were determined from the video, and information was obtained on
 the behaviour of the parents and the young in the nest.
 A disadvantage of picturing systems is that coding and quantifying the available
 information into data from the records remains "manual" and extremely time-
 consuming. Using modern digital techniques it would be possible to record
 pictures directly in electronic formats. Digital picture processing on a
 computer with a specialized software can make extracting the data more efficient
 by automatic selection of relevant frames, and by providing tools for measuring
 the size of (prey) items and maybe even for their identification.
 
 The combination of the automatic recording of brood and parent weights with
 radio-tracking of the parents' range use offers some attractive opportunities.
 Balances weighing artificial nests made of non-moistening material quantify
 brood growth as well as changes in parent condition with high temporal
 resolution. Simultaneous records of the parents' range use therefore allow the
 amount of food obtained from different habitat types to be quantified. In a
 pilot study of the Swiss Ornithological Institute, reported by Beat Naef-
 Daenzer, the simultaneous application of both techniques was tested successfully
 on the Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica). Initial data on four pairs have
 demonstrated that e.g. adverse weather greatly reduces the amount of food given
 to the nestlings, but this is not due to a reduction in searching effort of the
 parents. Since swallows forage in distinct areas for about 0.5-3 hours foraging
 success and the amount of food taken to the nest can be quantified with a
 resolution of a few hours.
 
 Elisabeth A. Schreiber (Washington, D.C.) talked about observations on the time
 and energy budgets of breeding boobies and tropicbirds. Presence and absence of
 radio transmittered birds was recorded by a computer to track adults' presence
 at the nest in order to determine feeding rates and resting times at nest. Watch
 activity recorders fixed on their leg were used to determine time on the water
 (resting) when away from the nest. Results did not support the energy limitation
 hypothesis, as adults spent most of their time resting and could increase
 feeding activity significantly when manipulated.
 
 A multisensor telemetry system for studying flight biology and energetics of
 free-flying Eurasian Griffons (Gyps fulvus) were presented by Ralf Boegel
 (Berchtesgaden). The method is suitable for long-term monitoring of heart rate,
 body temperature, plumage temperature and air pressure (flight altitude) of
 large birds. For establishing good correlations between measured parameters a
 calibration in two ways is essential: 1) correlating energy turnover rate versus
 heart rate and body temperature in a metabolic chamber (laboratory), and 2)
 later on in the field making visual observations to identify certain patterns of
 measured parameters, which correlate with a certain ethological context (e.g. a
 fast decrease in plumage temperature is associated with flight activities, even
 if the air pressure sensor indicates no changes in altitude, i.e. constant level
 flight). After these calibrations, most of the data can be interpreted without
 having visual observations.
 
 While automated measurements can produce high-resolution and accurate data -
 otherwise unavailable, the equipments are often expensive and without good
 software support data processing may become overwhelming. Constraints on sample
 size (of individuals) call for efficient experimental designs and a combination
 of direct observations with joint application of complementary automated
 techniques.
 
 
 
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