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| Home > Research > Publications 2007 > Abstracts | ||
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Atkinson, P.W., Baker, A.J., Bennett, K.A., Clark, N.A., Clark, J.A., Cole, K.B., Dekinga, A., Dey, A, Gillings, S., Gonzalez, P.M., Kalasz, K., Minton, C.D.T., Niles, L.J., Piersma, T., Robinson, R.A. &. Sitters, H.P. 2007. Rates of mass gain and energy deposition in red knot on their final spring staging site is both time - and condition dependent. J. Appl. Ecol. 44:885-895. Abstract 1. Millions of shorebirds migrate
each year through a small number of highly productive staging areas
where they often conflict with fisheries interests. Delaware Bay, USA,
is a major shorebird stopover site where, in spring, many thousands
of shorebirds undergo rapid mass gain by feeding on the eggs of commercially
harvested horseshoe crabs Limulus polyphemus. Key-words: migration strategy, phenotypic flexibility,
spare capacity, time-minimization |
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