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Keywords = Ballar stream

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Article
Nest Depth and Height Are Associated with Breeding Outcomes in the Small Bee-Eater (Merops orientalis): A Preliminary Field Study from Pakistan
by Asif Sadam, Muhammad Awais, Huijian Hu, Dongmei Yu and Yiming Hu
Animals 2026, 16(2), 186; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16020186 - 8 Jan 2026
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Abstract
Nest architecture and surrounding habitat features can strongly influence the reproductive success of cavity-nesting birds; however, quantitative data from natural environments remain limited. We examined how nest structure and surrounding habitat features correlate with reproduction in the small bee-eater (Merops orientalis). [...] Read more.
Nest architecture and surrounding habitat features can strongly influence the reproductive success of cavity-nesting birds; however, quantitative data from natural environments remain limited. We examined how nest structure and surrounding habitat features correlate with reproduction in the small bee-eater (Merops orientalis). A total of 38 natural nests were monitored during the breeding season. The Conway–Maxwell–Poisson model showed that cavity depth was a significant positive predictor of clutch size (β = 0.46 ± 0.22 SE, p = 0.036), whereas entrance diameter and nest height were not significantly related. Principal component analysis (PCA) of standardized cavity dimensions (cavity depth, entrance diameter, and nest height) showed that nest height (captured by PC2) was strongly associated with higher breeding success (OR = 0.002, p = 0.021), whereas overall cavity size (PC1) had a weaker, marginally positive correlation (OR = 3.87, p = 0.09). Habitat distance variables showed only weak, non-significant trends after accounting for multicollinearity. Nest structural traits explained more variation in reproductive performance than landscape variables (pseudo-R2 = 0.80 for clutch size; 0.59 for breeding success). Field monitoring of 38 nests showed a mean clutch size of 3.9 eggs, an overall hatching success of 77.5%, and a fledging success of 51.2%, yielding a 37.1% breeding success. Our results highlight the importance of conserving sandy streambanks and mitigating human disturbance in proximity to active nests to conserve breeding success in small bee-eaters. As these findings were based on one site and a single breeding season, broader generalizations will require replication across additional years and locations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ecology and Conservation)
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