4 research outputs found

    Price_Griffith_tables_ESM from Open cup nests evolved from roofed nests in the early passerines

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    Nest data for Australian passerine species (table S1) and world passerine families (table S2), and results of BiSSE analyses (table S3

    Supplementary Tables for the manuscript Variation in avian egg shape and nest structure is explained by climatic conditions

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    Supplementary material for the manuscript: <b>Variation in avian egg shape and nest structure is explained by climatic conditions.</b><div><b><br></b></div><div><b>Table S1</b> contains a list of breeding occurrence records for 310 Australian passerine species. The breeding records are for those species that breed within 100 km x 100 km grid cells and the x and y coordinates are the centre-points of the 100 km x 100 km grid cells, with coordinates in Albers Equal Area Conic Projection. Grid cells were excluded when the Completeness Index (CI, the ratio of the observed species richness to the estimated species richness) was less than 0.7, or there were fewer than 10 species with cup-shaped nests and 10 species with roofed nests.<div><p><br></p><p><b>Table S2</b> is a workbook containing the taxonomic details and trait data for the 310 Australian breeding passerines. The binomial nomenclature and common names listed are from the Australian Bird Data Version 1.0 (Garnett et al., 2015). Also included is the IOC 7.1 nomenclature and sequence number (Gill and Donskern 2017). For each species, we list the type of nest they build (i.e. cup-shaped, domed, and cavity) and the provide the egg elongation values (ratio of egg length to egg breadth).</p></div></div
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