Searching behaviour and diet of Oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus pairs feeding in their territories


Autoria(s): Hulsman, K.; Zalucki, M.P.; Iedema, A.
Data(s)

01/01/1996

Resumo

Search path, searching behaviour and diet of pairs of Oystercatchers feeding in mudflat territories were studied during spring. females ate Nereis, Mya, small unidentified prey, probably Corophium, and a few Macoma, whereas males primarily ate Macoma. Even when female and male foraged in the same site, they often caught different prey. The combination of 'The Search-rate/Detection Model' (Gendron & Staddon 1983) and 'The Harvestable Prey Model' (Zwarts & Wanink 1993) provide the theoretical framework in which to explain these differences in diet. Macoma are thought to be more cryptic than Nereis, Mya and Corophium. Therefore females, while searching at a faster rate than their respective mates, caught far fewer cryptic prey, but a greater number of more conspicuous prey than their mates. On the basis of distances moved before and after capturing prey, males exhibited area-restricted searching for Macoma and Corophium. In contrast, females did not exhibit any area-restricted searching. it is suggested that the distribution of Macoma and Corophium available to males searching slowly was more clumped than that of these two prey species available to females searching more quickly.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57425

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Netherlands Ornithologists' Union

Palavras-Chave #Ornithology #Oystercatcher #Haematopus Ostralegus #Search Path #Area-restricted Searching #Cryptic Prey #Wadden Sea #Waders #0608 Zoology
Tipo

Journal Article