Different species visit or exploit cavities for survival or reproduction, including human-made boxes. Ants and Paridae from mainland southern France share artificial boxes at different life-history stages. Colonies of the ant Crematogaster scutellaris occasionally prevent Paridae from roosting or breeding in boxes and therefore might influence nest-site selection in avian cavity-nesters. Factors that influence coexistence or avoidance in bird-ant interactions in the Mediterranean region are discussed.
Black rats and avian cavity-nesters share the same nest boxes in different oak habitat types on Corsica. The proportion of boxes occupied by cavity-nesting rats did not differ between broad-leaf deciduous and evergreen oak woodland, but was higher in boxes with a larger entrance hole. Competition between black rat and avian hole-nesters on Corsica may be stronger in great tits than in blue tits.
Insects and avian cavity-nesters share the same nest boxes in different oak habitat types on Corsica. The proportion of boxes occupied by ants did not differ between broad-leaf deciduous and evergreen oak woodland, but differed significantly between reproductive stages in two Paridae species. Different types of interactions between ants and avian hole-nesters are reported and discussed.