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Gillings, S., Atkinson,
P.W., Bardsley, S.L., Clark, N.A., Love, S.E., Robinson, R.A., Stillman,
R.A. & Weber, R.G. 2007. Shorebird predation of horseshoe crab eggs
in Deleware Bay: species contrasts and availability constraints. J.
Animal Ecology 76: 503-514 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2007.01229.x
Abstract
1. Functional responses – the relationship
between resource intake rate and resource abundance – are widely
used in explaining predator–prey interactions yet many studies
indicate that resource availability is crucial in dictating intake rates.
2. For time-stressed migrant birds refuelling at passage
sites, correct decisions concerning patch use are crucial as they determine
fattening rates and an individual’s future survival and reproduction.
Measuring availability alongside abundance is essential if spatial and
temporal patterns of foraging are to be explained.
3. A suite of shorebird species stage in Delaware Bay
where they consume horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus eggs.
Several factors including spawning activity and weather give rise to
marked spatial and temporal variation in the abundance and availability
of eggs. We undertook field experiments to determine and contrast the
intake rates of shorebird species pecking for surface and probing for
buried eggs.
4. Whether eggs were presented on the sand surface
or buried, we demonstrate strong aggregative responses and rapid depletion
(up to 80%). Depletion was greater at deeper depths when more eggs were
present. No consistent give-up densities were found. Type II functional
responses were found for surface eggs and buried eggs, with peck success
twice as high in the former. Maximum intake rates of surface eggs were
up to 83% higher than those of buried eggs.
5. Caution is needed when applying functional responses
predicted on the basis of morphology. Our expectation of a positive
relationship between body size and intake rate was not fully supported.
The smallest species, semipalmated sandpiper, had the lowest intake
rate but the largest species, red knot, achieved only the same intake
rate as the mid-sized dunlin.
6. These functional responses indicate that probing
is rarely more profitable than pecking. Currently, few beaches provide
egg densities sufficient for efficient probing. Areas where eggs are
deposited on the sand surface are critical for successful foraging and
ongoing migration. This may be especially true for red knot, which have
higher energetic demands owing to their larger body size yet appear
to have depressed intake rates because they consume smaller prey than
their body size should permit.
Key-words: aggregative response, Delaware Bay, functional response,
horseshoe crab eggs, prey abundance, prey availability, shorebird.
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