LJ87 1.33 1 0.0 – – – – – – – LJ88 1.52 2 2.8 – – – – – – – LJ89 1.61 3 11.3 15.6 3,734 1,286 5,916 1,267 0.867 17
LJ90 1.62 4 16.4 15.8 2,597 1,162 4,689 1,142 0.841 27
LJ91 1.61 5 11.1 15.5 3,049 1,248 5,956 1,132 0.861 17
LJ92 1.58 6 9.5 18.7 5,348 1,981 9,495 3,056 0.882 15
LJ93 1.66 7 8.3 18.8 4,930 2,250 8,654 1,544 0.822 13
LJ94 1.62 8 7.3 17.8 5,530 1,789 8,857 3,256 0.858 10
TO91 1.36 15 10.0 25.9 5,418 1,563 8,292 3,237 0.884 9
TO92 1.41 16 9.7 18.8 4,716 1,468 6,165 1,738 0.854 9
TO93 1.40 1 5.5 44.4 9,255 5,100 15,033 3,760 0.857 5
TO94 1.31 2 7.6 26.6 7,507 3,696 16,140 4,243 0.834 8
TO95 1.28 3 8.8 31.9 8,557 2,933 13,638 5,531 0.864 8
TO96 1.29 4 11.5 17.7 4,615 1,986 7,529 1,379 0.834 10
TO98 1.34 6 17.3 23.0 2,611 1,486 6,063 574 0.813 16
TM97 1.50 38 7.1 38.5 10,071 3,527 17,121 6,267 0.903 8
TM98 1.50 39 6.9 16.9 5,532 2,466 9,531 2,369 0.849 9
TM99 1.50 40 6.5 9.9 5,061 1,963 6,965 2,214 0.836 7
TM02 1.19 1 0.8 10.0 4,075 – – – 0.907 1
TM03 1.20 2 2.4 10.3 7,905 1,907 10,085 6,543 0.847 3
TM04 1.19 3 2.0 9.0 4,553 1,503 5,616 3,490 0.869 2
TM05 1.16 4 3.3 9.0 5,063 1,410 6,353 3,557 0.823 3
Cv H′ structural diversity, year years after fire, pairs/10 ha breeding pairs of Dartford warbler/10 ha, locations mean number of bird locations per territory, size territory size (minimum convex polygon in m
2 ), roundness perimeter circle/perimeter
territory having the same area, N number of territories measured, – non-measurable.
and at low density of heterospecifics, although this effect was modest.
Intraspecific territory overlap was low (Fig. 5a), averag- ing 3.0% (±7.6% SD) of the total territory area, and ranging
0–49.4% (n = 197). Dartford warbler density did not have
any significant effect on overlap (Table 5) and therefore intraspecific overlap can be considered density-indepen- dent. A significant, though rather weak, effect of the plot appeared in this model. No habitat variable had a significant effect on intraspecific overlap (Table 5).
The mean interspecific overlap between the Dartford and the other three warblers (Sylvia and Hippolais species) was over a degree of magnitude larger than intraspecific overlap (mean 50.6 ± 44.0% SD, range 0–179.1%, n = 197, Fig. 5b). The plot had a significant effect in the habitat model. Both heterospecific bird density and structural diversity had significant and positive relationships with interspecific territory overlap, and the magnitude of both effects was similar. The overall model maintained both explanatory
variables (Table 5), suggesting that interspecific overlap is a density-dependent phenomenon that can also be enhanced by certain habitat characteristics.
Discussion
This is one of the few studies analyzing the regulation of territory size in Old World passerines. The study of a large sample of territories along a broad habitat structure gradient provides a favorable situation in which to test both the structural-cues and the contender pressure hypotheses. This holds true, specifically, for postfire successions, since temporal variations in cover and bird population densities are usually concomitant (Smucker et al. 2005); a pattern that was already found for Mediterranean Sylvia warblers (Pons and Prodon 1996; Herrando et al. 2001). However, the relationships of territory size (and shape) with ecolog- ical variables show a site-dependent component, as sug-