Title of article :
Why do eastern curlews Numenius madagascariensis feed on prey that lowers intake rate before migration?
Author/Authors :
Zharikov، Yuri نويسنده , , Skilleter، Gregory A. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
-532
From page :
533
To page :
0
Abstract :
Eastern curlews Numenius madagascariensis spending the nonbreeding season in eastern Australia foraged on three intertidal decapods: soldier crab Mictyris longicarpus, sentinel crab Macrophthalmus crassipes and ghost-shrimp Trypaea australiensis. Due to their ecology, these crustaceans were spatially segregated (=distributed in ‘patches’) and the curlews intermittently consumed more than one prey type. It was predicted that if the curlews behaved as intake rate maximizers, the time spent foraging on a particular prey (patch) would reflect relative availabilities of the prey types and thus prey-specific intake rates would be equal. During the mid-nonbreeding period (November– December), Mictyris and Macrophthalmus were primarily consumed and prey-specific intake rates were statistically indistinguishable (8.8 versus 10.1 kJ×min-^1). Prior to migration (February), Mictyris and Trypaea were hunted and the respective intake rates Awere significantly different (8.9 versus 2.3 kJ×min ^1). Time allocation to Trypaea-Ahunting was independent of the availability of Mictyris. Thus, consumption of Trypaea Adepressed the overall intake rate. Six hypotheses for consuming Trypaea before migration Awere examined. Five hypotheses: the possible error by the predator, prey specialization, observer overestimation of time spent hunting Trypaea, supplementary prey and the choice of higher quality prey due to a digestive bottleneck, were deemed unsatisfactory. The explanation for consumption of a low intake-rate but high quality prey (Trypaea) deemed plausible was diet optimisation by the curlews in response to the pre-migratory modulation (decrease in size/processing capacity) of their digestive system. With a seasonal decrease in the average intake rate, the estimated intake per low tide increased from 1233 to 1508 kJ between the mid-nonbreeding and pre-migratory periods by increasing the overall time spent on the sandflats and the proportion of time spent foraging.
Keywords :
RAPID TOOLING , HYBRID MANUFACTURING , Rapid prototyping , MULTICOMPONENT PROTOTYPE
Journal title :
Journal of Avian Biology
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Journal of Avian Biology
Record number :
118988
Link To Document :
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