131 results on '"foraging patterns"'
Search Results
2. The relative importance of cisco (Coregonus artedi) in the diets of common loons (Gavia immer) among a set of cisco refuge lakes in Minnesota.
- Author
-
Kenow, Kevin P., Lor, Yer, Holbrook, Beth V., Fara, Luke J., Houdek, Steven C., Tajjioui, Tariq, Gray, Brian R., and Jacobson, Peter C.
- Abstract
Common loon (Gavia immer (Brünnich, 1764)) foraging patterns and the relative importance of cisco (Coregonus artedi Lesueur, 1818) in the diets of loons were evaluated for the Whitefish Chain of Lakes, a set of coldwater cisco refuge lakes in Minnesota, USA. Environmental DNA metabarcoding of loon fecal samples detected 15 fish species. Yellow perch (Perca flavescens (Mitchill, 1814)), mimic shiner (Notropis volucellus (Cope, 1865)), and cisco were the most prominent prey detected across the study lakes. We observed a shift in fish species consumed, with increases in detections of mimic shiner and cisco DNA among loon fecal samples collected in August and September. In some locations, suitable oxythermal habitat became restricted throughout the summer, forcing cisco into surface waters, which potentially increased their vulnerability to loon predation. Conversely, large foraging aggregations of loons were observed during late summer through fall at locations with ample oxythermal habitat and abundant cisco populations. We hypothesize that cisco were sought by loons as a high-calorie prey resource prior to migration. Conservation efforts directed at preserving water quality in important cisco refuge lakes are likely to benefit common loons through enhancement of both the forage base, for resident and migrating birds, and breeding habitat suitability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Dive characteristics of Common Loons wintering in the Gulf of Mexico and off the southern U.S. Atlantic coast.
- Author
-
Kenow, Kevin P., Fara, Luke J., Houdek, Steven C., Gray, Brian R., Heard, Darryl J., Meyer, Michael W., Fox, Timothy J., Kratt, Robert, and Henderson, Carrol L.
- Subjects
COMMON loon ,AUTUMN ,WINTER ,COASTS ,SATELLITE telemetry ,DAYLIGHT - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Field Ornithology is the property of Resilience Alliance and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Galapagos Sea Lions and Fur Seals, Adapted to a Variable World
- Author
-
Riofrío-Lazo, Marjorie, Páez-Rosas, Diego, Würsig, Bernd, Series Editor, Campagna, Claudio, editor, and Harcourt, Robert, editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Geopolitics of Marine Ecology
- Author
-
Blair, James J. A., author
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Potential for dietary competition between the threatened black-flanked rock-wallaby and sympatric western grey kangaroo.
- Author
-
White, Julia L. and Fleming, Patricia A.
- Subjects
KANGAROOS ,PLANT competition ,WILDLIFE refuges ,FERTILIZERS ,EDIBLE plants - Abstract
An overabundance of western grey kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus) can detrimentally impact agriculture and compete with threatened fauna for food resources. In Paruna Wildlife Sanctuary, south-western Western Australia, kangaroos are common and widespread. By contrast, the endangered black-flanked rock-wallaby (Petrogale lateralis lateralis) are spatially constrained to rock refuges. We investigated the potential for dietary competition between these two species by measuring the overlap in their diets, spatial overlap in their foraging patches, and comparing their diets with food resource availability. A combination of scat analysis, passive IR camera trapping and vegetation surveys were employed around rock outcrops used by rock-wallabies within the sanctuary. Rock-wallaby diets were dominated by forbs, overlapping 56% with kangaroo diet, which included mostly browse and forbs. Some of their shared preferred food resources were spatially and/or temporally limited, suggesting potential competition for these food plants. There was also a 33% spatial overlap of foraging patches between the two species. The dietary and spatial overlap detected between rock-wallabies and kangaroos suggest there is potential for resource competition, which may be exacerbated if kangaroo numbers increase. Future conservation actions include monitoring western grey kangaroo densities and food plant availability. Population control for kangaroos may be required, particularly for increasingly hot and dry years, as predicted under climate change. Western grey kangaroos can reach very high densities under favourable conditions, which could represent a competition threat for the sympatric endangered black-flanked rock-wallaby. Investigations into potential for dietary competition between these two species within Paruna Wildlife Sanctuary, Australia showed dietary and spatial overlap, suggesting potential for competition. We make recommendations for future conservation actions to mitigate threats to rock-wallaby populations, including possible control of western grey kangaroo densities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Dive characteristics of Common Loons wintering in the Gulf of Mexico and off the southern U.S. Atlantic coast
- Author
-
Kevin P. Kenow, Luke J. Fara, Steven C. Houdek, Brian R. Gray, Darryl J. Heard, Michael W. Meyer, Timothy J. Fox, Robert Kratt, and Carrol L. Henderson
- Subjects
archival geolocator tags ,common loon ,dive characteristics ,foraging patterns ,gavia immer ,satellite telemetry ,wintering areas ,Zoology ,QL1-991 ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
Common Loons (Gavia immer) winter primarily in marine coastal areas and utilize a forage base that is poorly defined, especially for offshore areas. Information on dive activity is needed for describing foraging strategies and for inferring prey distribution. Archival geolocator tags were used to determine the wintering locations and dive characteristics of adult Common Loons captured and marked on breeding lakes in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Among loons that completed fall migration, most wintered in the Gulf of Mexico, with smaller proportions wintering off the southern Atlantic Coast or impoundments in the southeastern United States. Adult Common Loons tended to occupy offshore areas of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean and, on average, spent about 60% of daylight hours foraging. Dive depths were as deep as 50 m (Gulf of Mexico) and dive characteristics indicated that loons were primarily foraging on benthic prey. Total dive duration, time at maximum depth, and post-dive surface intervals increased with dive depths among wintering Common Loons. Our results are expected to contribute to the understanding of the wintering ecology of Common Loons and be useful in informing regional and national conservation planning efforts.
- Published
- 2023
8. Migration patterns and wintering distribution of common loons breeding in the Upper Midwest.
- Author
-
Kenow, Kevin P., Fara, Luke J., Houdek, Steven C., Gray, Brian R., Heard, Darryl J., Meyer, Michael W., Fox, Timothy J., Kratt, Robert J., Ford, Scott L., Gendron‐Fitzpatrick, Annette, and Henderson, Carrol L.
- Subjects
- *
COMMON loon , *SATELLITE telemetry , *ADULTS , *WINTER , *PARASITIC diseases , *OIL spills - Abstract
Identification of geographic linkages among breeding, migratory and wintering common loon Gavia immer populations is needed to inform regional and national conservation planning efforts and compensation of loons lost during marine oil spill events. Satellite telemetry and archival geolocator tags were used to determine the migration patterns and wintering locations of breeding adult and young of the year juvenile common loons captured and marked on lakes in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. Adult loons typically traveled from breeding lakes, often via larger staging lakes, to the Great Lakes (primarily Lake Michigan) and then on to wintering areas. Most radiomarked juvenile common loons utilized natal lakes or local lakes through mid‐November. Subsequently, the first fall migration of juvenile loons was generally initiated later, and more direct and quicker to wintering areas relative to adults. Among adult (n = 103) and juvenile (n = 23) loons that completed fall migration, most wintered in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM), with smaller proportions wintering off the southern Atlantic Coast or impoundments in the southeastern United States. Spring migration of adults to breeding lakes was less prolonged than fall migration, with adult male loons tending to depart wintering areas earlier than adult females. Juvenile common loons migrated during their first spring from wintering sites in the GOM to summer in the Gulf of St Lawrence/Nova Scotia Coastal region. Juvenile mortality was largely linked to parasitic infection and emaciation; spring appeared to be a survival bottleneck among juvenile loons monitored in our study. Our results identify several areas where common loon conservation efforts could be directed to protect key habitats and minimize stressors during the non‐breeding period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Linking pollen foraging of megachilid bees to their nest bacterial microbiota
- Author
-
Anna Voulgari‐Kokota, Markus J. Ankenbrand, Gudrun Grimmer, Ingolf Steffan‐Dewenter, and Alexander Keller
- Subjects
foraging patterns ,nest microbiota ,plant–microbe–pollinator triangle ,pollination network ,solitary bees ,wild bees ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Solitary bees build their nests by modifying the interior of natural cavities, and they provision them with food by importing collected pollen. As a result, the microbiota of the solitary bee nests may be highly dependent on introduced materials. In order to investigate how the collected pollen is associated with the nest microbiota, we used metabarcoding of the ITS2 rDNA and the 16S rDNA to simultaneously characterize the pollen composition and the bacterial communities of 100 solitary bee nest chambers belonging to seven megachilid species. We found a weak correlation between bacterial and pollen alpha diversity and significant associations between the composition of pollen and that of the nest microbiota, contributing to the understanding of the link between foraging and bacteria acquisition for solitary bees. Since solitary bees cannot establish bacterial transmission routes through eusociality, this link could be essential for obtaining bacterial symbionts for this group of valuable pollinators. Open Research Badges This article has earned an Open Data Badge for making publicly available the digitally‐shareable data necessary to reproduce the reported results. The data is available at https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/PRJEB27223, https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/PRJEB31610, and https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.qk36k8q
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Foraging Ecology of the California Sea Lion
- Author
-
Costa, Daniel
- Subjects
foraging patterns ,marine mammals ,tagging data ,warming events ,ocean climate models - Abstract
Marine biologists are enlisting marine mammals to probe the ocean. The foraging patterns of sea lions are providing insights into ocean warming and how it influences the distribution of fishes.
- Published
- 2006
11. Measuring At Sea Feeding to Understand the Foraging Behavior of Pinnipeds
- Author
-
Kuhn, Carey E.
- Subjects
pinnipeds ,foraging patterns ,phocid ,northern elephant seal ,otariid ,California sea lion ,prey consumption ,marine predators - Abstract
Pinniped have evolved a range of reproductive and foraging patterns to deal with the constraint of terrestrial parturition and marine feeding. To understand the link between these constraints it is necessary to understand both reproductive periods on land and foraging at sea. I examined the foraging behavior of a phocid (northern elephant seal, Mirounga angustirostris) and otariid (California sea lion, Zalophus californianus) species to provide insight into the divergent life histories of these families. To understand foraging behavior it is necessary to know when and where animals find prey. Using stomach temperature telemetry, I conducted rigorous feeding experiments with both species to determine whether measures of stomach temperature can be used to identify and quantify prey consumption. Feedings were identified with high accuracy and the equations to estimate mass consumed were not significantly different between species.Until recently, studies on the foraging behavior of marine predators have relied on indirect measures of feeding, such as changes in diving behavior or movement patterns. When combined with measures of at sea behavior, stomach temperature telemetry can provide information about when and where animals uccessfully capture prey. I deployed stomach temperature telemeters along with time-depth recorders and satellite transmitters to examine the foraging behavior of northern elephant seals. This resulted in the first measures of feeding behavior and foraging success in elephant seals, as well as provided a validation of indirect indices of foraging behavior.Finally, I examined the foraging behavior of free-ranging California sea lions and documented how their behavior changed annually in response to environmental variation that occurred over three years. Although stomach temperature telemeters were deployed on sea lions, I was only able to maintain the telemeters in the animals for long enough to measure at sea feeding in one female. Therefore, foraging behavior was examined based on indirect measures of feeding, such as diving behavior and at sea distribution. I found females alter movement patterns in response to even modest environmental variation. Such detailed information on the foraging behavior of these species will make it possible to examine the link between reproductive pattern and at sea foraging behavior.
- Published
- 2006
12. Linking pollen foraging of megachilid bees to their nest bacterial microbiota.
- Author
-
Voulgari‐Kokota, Anna, Ankenbrand, Markus J., Grimmer, Gudrun, Steffan‐Dewenter, Ingolf, and Keller, Alexander
- Subjects
- *
POLLEN , *BEES , *NESTS , *BIRD nests , *POLLINATION by bees , *EUSOCIALITY , *NEST building - Abstract
Solitary bees build their nests by modifying the interior of natural cavities, and they provision them with food by importing collected pollen. As a result, the microbiota of the solitary bee nests may be highly dependent on introduced materials. In order to investigate how the collected pollen is associated with the nest microbiota, we used metabarcoding of the ITS2 rDNA and the 16S rDNA to simultaneously characterize the pollen composition and the bacterial communities of 100 solitary bee nest chambers belonging to seven megachilid species. We found a weak correlation between bacterial and pollen alpha diversity and significant associations between the composition of pollen and that of the nest microbiota, contributing to the understanding of the link between foraging and bacteria acquisition for solitary bees. Since solitary bees cannot establish bacterial transmission routes through eusociality, this link could be essential for obtaining bacterial symbionts for this group of valuable pollinators. Open Research Badges: This article has earned an Open Data Badge for making publicly available the digitally‐shareable data necessary to reproduce the reported results. The data is available at https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/PRJEB27223, https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/data/view/PRJEB31610, and https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.qk36k8q [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. From a sequential pattern, temporal adjustments emerge in hummingbird traplining.
- Author
-
TELLO‐RAMOS, Maria C., HEALY, Susan D., and HURLY, Andrew T.
- Subjects
- *
RUFOUS hummingbird , *FORAGING behavior , *MOVEMENT sequences , *SPATIAL behavior in animals , *FLOWERS - Abstract
Animals that feed from resources that are constant in space and that refill may benefit from repeating the order in which they visit locations. This is a behavior known as traplining, a spatial phenomenon. Hummingbirds, like other central‐place foragers, use short traplines when moving between several rewarding sites. Here we investigated whether traplining hummingbirds also use relevant temporal information when choosing which flowers to visit. Wild rufous hummingbirds that were allowed to visit 3 artificial flower patches in which flowers were refilled 20 min after they had been depleted repeated the order in which they visited the 3 patches. Although they tended to visit the first 2 patches sooner than 20 min, they visited the third patch at approximately 20‐min intervals. The time between visits to the patches increased across the experiment, suggesting that the birds learned to wait longer before visiting a patch. The birds appeared to couple the sequential pattern of a trapline with temporal regularity, to some degree. This suggests that there is a temporal component to the repeated spatial movements flown by foraging wild hummingbirds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Foraging Movements of Black Skimmers (Rynchops niger) Nesting on the Isles Dernieres Barrier Island Refuge, Louisiana, USA.
- Author
-
Rolland, Virginie, Furfey, Brehan C., and Pierce, Aaron
- Subjects
WATER birds ,BARRIER islands ,PROTECTED areas ,COLONIAL birds ,BLACK - Abstract
Several populations of Black Skimmers (Rynchops niger), colonial waterbirds with a tactile foraging strategy, are declining. Improving our limited knowledge of Black Skimmer foraging ecology has become critical to inform conservation decisions. Black Skimmers were GPS-tracked from the Isles Dernieres Barrier Island Refuge in coastal Louisiana, USA, from 27 June-1 July 2013 and 30 May-2 June 2016, to shed light on their foraging movements during the breeding season. Black Skimmers foraged almost exclusively at night, as far as 16 km from the colony in the coastal marshes of Louisiana, in a home range of 86-256 km
2 . Additional movement data are needed to identify areas of conservation need and provide a basis for future studies of skimmer response to environmental changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Mechanisms directing host plant selection by leaf-cutting ants (Hymenoptera: Attini)
- Author
-
Ridley, Philip Stephen
- Subjects
577 ,Foraging patterns ,Insects - Abstract
There is an obligate symbiotic relationship between leaf-cutting ants of the genera Atta and Acromyrmex (Hymenoptera; Attini) and the fungus Attamyces bromatificus Kreisel. Leaf-cutting ants forage on leaf material which they transport back to the nest where it is processed to form a substrate on which they cultivate Attamyces. There is much controversy surrounding the influence of each symbiotic partner in the selection of host plant material, especially concerning the role of Attamyces in directing foraging effort. Evidence supporting the hypothesis that the ants avoid plants containing fungicidal compounds has been somewhat contradictory, not the least because many plant secondary chemicals possess both fungicidal and insecticidal properties. By the development of a granular bait, a novel method is described whereby the response of Attamyces bromatificus to fungicidal compounds and its subsequent effect on leaf-cutting ant foraging behaviour is investigated. As a result it is demonstrated that leaf-cutting ants learn to reject plant material that contains chemicals injurious to the fungus. After an initial period of acceptance, laboratory colonies of the ant Atta sexdens rubropilosa rejected a granular bait containing a fungicidal agent (cycloheximide) and orange peel and subsequently ceased foraging on these granules. Taking into account the chemical and physical properties of these granules this response could only be accounted for by ants responding to a signal released by stressed fungus. Colonies rejecting experimental orange granules also rejected control orange granules containing no cycloheximide indicating that the ants become negatively conditioned to some chemical aspect of orange peel and not cycloheximide. Generalization of this response was observed; colonies rejecting orange granules also rejected grapefruit granules.
- Published
- 1994
16. Drivers of habitat quality for a reintroduced elk herd
- Author
-
Quinlan, Braiden A., Rosenberger, Jacalyn P., Kalb, David M., Abernathy, Heather N., Thorne, Emily D., Ford, W. Mark, and Cherry, Michael J.
- Subjects
home-range size ,body-size ,restoration ,Multidisciplinary ,diet composition ,Deer ,mule deer ,Animals, Wild ,resource selection ,cervus-elaphus ,Homing Behavior ,foraging patterns ,Pregnancy ,Animals ,Female ,movements ,Seasons ,season ,Ecosystem - Abstract
Understanding spatiotemporal variation in habitat quality is essential for guiding wildlife reintroduction and restoration programs. The habitat productivity hypothesis posits that home range size is inversely related to habitat quality. Thus, home range size may be used as a proxy for habitat quality and can identify important land cover features for a recovering species. We sought to quantify variation in home range size across the biological cycle (seasons) for a reintroduced elk (Cervus canadensis) population in southwestern Virginia, USA and quantify habitat quality by linking home range sizes to the land cover types they contain using linear mixed-effects models. We found mean home range size was largest during late gestation for female elk. Additionally, throughout the year, smaller home ranges were associated with larger proportions of non-forested habitats whereas forested habitats were generally the opposite. However, both presumed poor- and high-quality habitats influenced female elk space use. Our approach revealed spatial variation in habitat quality for a recovering elk herd, demonstrated the importance of non-forested habitats to elk, can guide decisions regarding the location of future elk reintroduction programs, and serve as a model for evaluating habitat quality associated with wildlife reintroductions. Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources [F18AF00664]; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Wildlife and Sportfish Restoration Program Published version Funding for this project was provided by the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources to Virginia Tech using Wildlife Restoration funds (award F18AF00664) provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Wildlife and Sportfish Restoration Program. Public domain – authored by a U.S. government employee
- Published
- 2022
17. Comparison of foraging patterns between northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) pups and adult females from San Miguel Island, California using stable isotope analysis
- Author
-
Howard, Tanner
- Subjects
Biology ,Zoology ,Wildlife conservation ,Ecogeochemistry ,Foraging patterns ,Northern fur seals ,San Miguel Island ,Stable isotope analysis ,Whiskers - Abstract
Ecogeochemistry has become a useful tool in studying foraging ecology of marine mammals and other consumers. Ratios of stable carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) isotopes in consumer tissues can reflect foraging history over longer time spans than traditional methods of dietary analysis. To better understand overall foraging patterns and potential stable isotope relationships between individuals from different age groups within the same population, I measured stable isotope values from unrelated northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) pups and post-parturient adult females from San Miguel Island, California. Fur seals at San Miguel Island can be severely impacted by climate events such as the El Niño Southern Oscillation, increasing the need to further understand their foraging ecology. I analyzed sequential δ13C and δ15N values along single whiskers from five pups and five adult females, estimated pup and in utero whisker growth rates, and reconstructed stable isotope profiles over time for each vibrissa. I then performed correlation tests on the stable isotope profiles to compare mean δ13C and δ15N values from pups and adult females. Pups had significantly lower δ13C values and significantly higher δ15N values than adult females over an overlapping 50-day period prior to tissue collection. Stable isotope profiles for pups were significantly correlated, but there were no correlations among adult female stable isotope profiles. My results suggest large inter-individual variation among adult female foraging patterns, no significant relationship between stable isotope values from unrelated pups and adult females, and potentially distinct stable isotope minima indicating the birth event for pups.
- Published
- 2018
18. Kelp Gull (Larus dominicanus) Use of Alternative Feeding Habitats at the Bahía San Blas Protected Area, Argentina.
- Author
-
Kasinsky, Tatiana, Suárez, Nicolás, Marinao, Cristian, and Yorio, Pablo
- Subjects
SOUTHERN black-backed gull ,KELP bed ecology ,BIRD ecology ,BIRD conservation ,BIRD habitats - Abstract
Kelp Gull (Larus dominicanus) foraging patterns were studied by deploying GPS loggers on 20 incubating individuals at their colony in the Bahía San Blas protected area, Argentina. Mean number of trips per day was 1.5 ± 0.5, and mean trip duration was 272.6 ± 165.2 min. Mean maximum distance from the colony was 19.6 ± 24.4 km. Incubating Kelp Gulls visited natural and anthropogenic environments. Individuals switched between two or three different habitat types 47% of the time during a given foraging trip. Kelp Gulls showed a differential use of feeding areas, with a significantly higher use of refuse dumps (75%; n = 151 trips) than coastal (47%), terrestrial (10%) and offshore (10%) habitats. In 72% of the recorded trips, Kelp Gulls targeted the dump located in the small town of Bahía San Blas, where waste generated by recreational fishing is regularly disposed. Moreover, most visited shoreline locations were those regularly used by recreational fishers. Despite showing plasticity in foraging habitat use, the local refuse dump and nearby shoreline sites where fish waste is regularly disposed were the main feeding habitats for incubating Kelp Gulls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Distribution and foraging patterns of common loons on Lake Michigan with implications for exposure to type E avian botulism.
- Author
-
Kenow, Kevin P., Houdek, Steven C., Fara, Luke J., Gray, Brian R., Lubinski, Brian R., Heard, Darryl J., Meyer, Michael W., Fox, Timothy J., and Kratt, Robert J.
- Abstract
Common loons ( Gavia immer ) staging on the Great Lakes during fall migration are at risk to episodic outbreaks of type E botulism. Information on distribution, foraging patterns, and exposure routes of loons are needed for understanding the physical and ecological factors that contribute to avian botulism outbreaks. Aerial surveys were conducted to document the spatiotemporal distribution of common loons on Lake Michigan during falls 2011–2013. In addition, satellite telemetry and archival geolocator tags were used to determine the distribution and foraging patterns of individual common loons while using Lake Michigan during fall migration. Common loon distribution observed during aerial surveys and movements of individual radiomarked and/or geotagged loons suggest a seasonal pattern of use, with early fall use of Green Bay and northern Lake Michigan followed by a shift in distribution to southern Lake Michigan before moving on to wintering areas. Common loons tended to occupy offshore areas of Lake Michigan and, on average, spent the majority of daylight hours foraging. Dive depths were as deep as 60 m and dive characteristics suggested that loons were primarily foraging on benthic prey. A recent study concluded that round gobies ( Neogobius melanostomus ) are an important prey item of common loons and may be involved in transmission of botulinum neurotoxin type E. Loon distribution coincides with the distribution of dreissenid mussel biomass, an important food resource for round gobies. Our observations support speculation that energy transfer to higher trophic levels via gobies may occur in deep-water habitats, along with transfer of botulinum neurotoxin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Giant panda foraging and movement patterns in response to bamboo shoot growth.
- Author
-
Zhang, Mingchun, Zhang, Zhizhong, Li, Zhong, Hong, Mingsheng, Zhou, Xiaoping, Zhou, Shiqiang, Zhang, Jindong, Hull, Vanessa, Huang, Jinyan, and Zhang, Hemin
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A new approach for investigating spatial relationships of ichnofossils: a case study of Ediacaran-Cambrian animal traces
- Author
-
Mitchell, Emily G., Evans, Scott D., Chen, Zhe, Xiao, Shuhai, Mitchell, Emily G., Evans, Scott D., Chen, Zhe, and Xiao, Shuhai
- Abstract
Trace fossils record foraging behaviors, the search for resources in patchy environments, of animals in the rock record. Quantification of the strength, density, and nature of foraging behaviors enables the investigation of how these may have changed through time. Here, we present a novel approach to explore such patterns using spatial point process analyses to quantify the scale and strength of ichnofossil spatial distributions on horizontal bedding planes. To demonstrate the utility of this approach, we use two samples from the terminal Ediacaran Shibantan Member in South China (between 551 and 543 Ma) and the early Cambrian Nagaur Sandstone in northwestern India (between 539 and 509 Ma). We find that ichnotaxa on both surfaces exhibited significant nonhomogeneous lateral patterns, with distinct levels of heterogeneity exhibited by different types of trace fossils. In the Shibantan, two ichnotaxa show evidence for mutual positive aggregation over a shared resource, suggesting the ability to focus on optimal resource areas. Trace fossils from the Nagaur Sandstone exhibit more sophisticated foraging behavior, with greater niche differentiation. Critically, mark correlation functions highlight significant spatial autocorrelation of trace fossil orientations, demonstrating the greater ability of these Cambrian tracemakers to focus on optimal patches. Despite potential limitations, these analyses hint at changes in the development and optimization of foraging at the Ediacaran/Cambrian transition and highlight the potential of spatial point process analysis to tease apart subtle differences in behavior in the trace fossil record.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Paleobiology
- Author
-
Emily G. Mitchell, Scott D. Evans, Zhe Chen, and Shuhai Xiao
- Subjects
fossil ,Ecology ,Paleontology ,microbial mats ,insights ,flight search patterns ,information ,Yangtze gorges area ,heritage site ,foraging patterns ,levy flight ,heterogeneity ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Trace fossils record foraging behaviors, the search for resources in patchy environments, of animals in the rock record. Quantification of the strength, density, and nature of foraging behaviors enables the investigation of how these may have changed through time. Here, we present a novel approach to explore such patterns using spatial point process analyses to quantify the scale and strength of ichnofossil spatial distributions on horizontal bedding planes. To demonstrate the utility of this approach, we use two samples from the terminal Ediacaran Shibantan Member in South China (between 551 and 543 Ma) and the early Cambrian Nagaur Sandstone in northwestern India (between 539 and 509 Ma). We find that ichnotaxa on both surfaces exhibited significant nonhomogeneous lateral patterns, with distinct levels of heterogeneity exhibited by different types of trace fossils. In the Shibantan, two ichnotaxa show evidence for mutual positive aggregation over a shared resource, suggesting the ability to focus on optimal resource areas. Trace fossils from the Nagaur Sandstone exhibit more sophisticated foraging behavior, with greater niche differentiation. Critically, mark correlation functions highlight significant spatial autocorrelation of trace fossil orientations, demonstrating the greater ability of these Cambrian tracemakers to focus on optimal patches. Despite potential limitations, these analyses hint at changes in the development and optimization of foraging at the Ediacaran/Cambrian transition and highlight the potential of spatial point process analysis to tease apart subtle differences in behavior in the trace fossil record. UKRI grant [NE/S014756/1]; Agouron Institute Geobiology fellowship; National Science Foundation [EAR-2021207]; National Natural Science Foundation of China [41921002] Published version We thank M. Sharma and D. Pandey for field guidance and discussion on the Nagaur fossils, X. Yuan and C. Zhou for discussion on the Shibantan fossils, and two anonymous reviewers for constructive criticism. This work was funded by a UKRI grant (NE/S014756/1) to E.G.M. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising. S.D.E. was funded by an Agouron Institute Geobiology fellowship, S.X. by the National Science Foundation (EAR-2021207), and Z.C. by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41921002). The authors declare no competing financial interests.
- Published
- 2022
23. Patrones de actividad forrajera y tamaño de nido de Acromyrmex lobicornis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) en una zona urbana de San Luis, Argentina Foraging activity patterns and nest size of Acromyrmex lobicornis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in an urban zone of San Luis, Argentina
- Author
-
Laura E. Jofré and Ana I. Medina
- Subjects
Hormigas cortadoras de hojas ,Attini ,Acromyrmex ,Actividad de forrajeo ,Tamaño de nido ,Leaf-cutting ants ,Foraging patterns ,Nest size ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Diversos factores pueden influir sobre la actividad de forrajeo de las hormigas cortadoras de hojas. Sin embargo, los factores climáticos, especialmente la temperatura, pueden ser considerados los más importantes en las regiones templadas. Se midió la actividad de forrajeo y el tamaño del nido en cuatro colonias de Acromyrmex lobicornis Emery en la localidad de Juana Koslay, San Luis. La actividad forrajera se determinó a partir del número de hormigas que ingresan al nido cargadas con fragmentos vegetales por unidad de tiempo, a lo largo de un año. Se midió la temperatura del aire y el suelo en cada oportunidad. Para estimar el tamaño del nido, se midió el área de forrajeo, el diámetro del túmulo y el número de obreras en cada colonia. Se encontraron asociaciones entre la actividad de forrajeo y las temperaturas del aire y del suelo en todos los meses del año, a excepción de febrero, julio y diciembre. Esta asociación fue positiva en los meses de octubre, mayo, junio, agosto y setiembre; pero negativa en los meses de noviembre, enero, marzo y abril. Las colonias mostraron actividad diurna en invierno y nocturna en verano. La temperatura y el tamaño del nido son factores que influyen sobre la actividad de forrajeo de A. lobicornis.Many factors can affect the foraging activity of leaf-cutting ants. However, climatic factors, especially temperature, could be considered the most important in temperate regions. In this work, we measured foraging activity and nest size in four colonies of Acromyrmex lobicornis Emery located in Juana Koslay, San Luis. Foraging activity was determined by the number of ants carrying plant fragments that entered the nest per unit time during a year. In each opportunity air and soil temperature were measured. To estimate nest size we used foraging area, mound diameter and number of workers in each colony Foraging activity and air and soil temperature correlated in every month of the year except February, July and December. However, the correlation was positive during October, May, June, August and September, and negative in November, January, March and April. The nests showed activity all the year, but diurnal in winter and nocturnal in summer. The temperature and the nest size are factors that influence the foraging activity of A. lobicornis.
- Published
- 2012
24. From a sequential pattern, temporal adjustments emerge in hummingbird traplining
- Author
-
Maria C. Tello-Ramos, T. Andrew Hurly, Susan D. Healy, University of St Andrews. School of Biology, University of St Andrews. Centre for Biological Diversity, University of St Andrews. Institute of Behavioural and Neural Sciences, and University of St Andrews. Centre for Social Learning & Cognitive Evolution
- Subjects
Rufous hummingbirds ,0106 biological sciences ,Time Factors ,QH301 Biology ,Foraging ,NDAS ,Zoology ,Flowers ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Birds ,QH301 ,biology.animal ,Selasphorus rufus ,Animals ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Temporal information ,Foraging patterns ,QL ,biology ,Artificial flower ,05 social sciences ,Interval timing ,Feeding Behavior ,QL Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Hummingbird ,Cues - Abstract
Animals that feed from resources that are constant in space and that refill may benefit from repeating the order in which they visit locations. This is a behavior known as traplining, a spatial phenomenon. Hummingbirds, like other central‐place foragers, use short traplines when moving between several rewarding sites. Here we investigated whether traplining hummingbirds also use relevant temporal information when choosing which flowers to visit. Wild rufous hummingbirds that were allowed to visit 3 artificial flower patches in which flowers were refilled 20 min after they had been depleted repeated the order in which they visited the 3 patches. Although they tended to visit the first 2 patches sooner than 20 min, they visited the third patch at approximately 20‐min intervals. The time between visits to the patches increased across the experiment, suggesting that the birds learned to wait longer before visiting a patch. The birds appeared to couple the sequential pattern of a trapline with temporal regularity, to some degree. This suggests that there is a temporal component to the repeated spatial movements flown by foraging wild hummingbirds. Postprint
- Published
- 2019
25. Double-Crested Cormorants ( Phalacrocorax auritus) on the Move in the Beaver Archipelago, Northern Lake Michigan.
- Author
-
Tucker, Taaja R. and Seefelt, Nancy E.
- Subjects
DOUBLE-crested cormorant ,FORAGING behavior ,PERMUTATION groups ,SEA bird ecology ,SEA birds ,FOOD - Abstract
The article focuses on Double-crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) that can be found in foraging locations in northern Lake Michigan. This specie was recorded in the said area from 2003 to 2013. A significant shift in foraging locations that occurred during the said period was found through a multi-responsive permutation procedure. The correspondence of the 2010 foraging location data with the early departure of Double-crested Cormorants from the Beaver Archipelago is mentioned.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Effect of Food Supply on Foraging Patterns and Body Weights of Long-toed Stints (Calidris subminuta).
- Author
-
NIMNUAN, SOMCHAI, ROUND, PHILIP D., SAWINI, TOMMASO, CHUNKAO, KASEM, and GALE, GEORGE A.
- Subjects
FORAGING behavior ,FOOD supply research ,CALIDRIS subminuta ,BODY weight ,INVERTEBRATES - Abstract
The article presents a study which explored the effect of seasonal variation in food density on foraging patterns and body weights of Long-toed Stint (Calidris subminuta), a relatively common winter visitor. It describes the methodology of the study conducted during the passage and overwintering seasons in wastewater treatment ponds and salt-pans on the Inner Gulf of Thailand. The findings suggest the need for further research on invertebrate dynamics and shorebird diets in the region.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Kelp Gull (Larus dominicanus) Use of Alternative Feeding Habitats at the Bahía San Blas Protected Area, Argentina
- Author
-
Tatiana Kasinsky, Nicolás Suárez, Cristian Marinao, and Pablo Yorio
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Small town ,LARUS DOMINICANUS ,Foraging ,Kelp ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Ciencias Biológicas ,Recreational fishing ,Larus dominicanus ,Shore ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,FORAGING PATTERNS ,RECREATIONAL FISHING ,Ecología ,biology.organism_classification ,SEABIRDS ,Fishery ,PATAGONIA ,Geography ,Habitat ,KELP GULL ,Animal Science and Zoology ,ANTHROPOGENIC FOOD SOURCES ,Protected area ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS - Abstract
Kelp Gull (Larus dominicanus) foraging patterns were studied by deploying GPS loggers on 20 incubating individuals at their colony in the Bahía San Blas protected area, Argentina. Mean number of trips per day was 1.5 ± 0.5, and mean trip duration was 272.6 ± 165.2 min. Mean maximum distance from the colony was 19.6 ± 24.4 km. Incubating Kelp Gulls visited natural and anthropogenic environments. Individuals switched between two or three different habitat types 47% of the time during a given foraging trip. Kelp Gulls showed a differential use of feeding areas, with a significantly higher use of refuse dumps (75%; n = 151 trips) than coastal (47%), terrestrial (10%) and offshore (10%) habitats. In 72% of the recorded trips, Kelp Gulls targeted the dump located in the small town of Bahía San Blas, where waste generated by recreational fishing is regularly disposed. Moreover, most visited shoreline locations were those regularly used by recreational fishers. Despite showing plasticity in foraging habitat use, the local refuse dump and nearby shoreline sites where fish waste is regularly disposed were the main feeding habitats for incubating Kelp Gulls. Fil: Kasinsky, Tatiana. Centro Para El Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (cesimar), Conicet-cenpat; Argentina Fil: Suárez, Nicolás. Centro Para El Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (cesimar), Conicet-cenpat; Argentina Fil: Marinao, Cristian Javier. Centro Para El Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (cesimar), Conicet-cenpat; Argentina Fil: Yorio, Pablo Martin. Centro Para El Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (cesimar), Conicet-cenpat; Argentina. Wildlife Conservation Society Argentina; Argentina
- Published
- 2018
28. Movements of satellite tracked Magellanic penguins (Spheniscus magellanicus) in a wintering area in southern Brazil.
- Author
-
Silva, Aline Barbosa, Valls, Fernanda C.L., Marques, Fernanda Pinto, and Bugoni, Leandro
- Subjects
WILDLIFE management areas ,WILDLIFE conservation ,ANCHOVY fisheries ,OFFSHORE wind power plants ,PENGUINS ,OCEAN temperature ,ARTIFICIAL satellite tracking ,REGIONS of freshwater influence - Abstract
Food availability and oceanographic conditions drive the distribution and movement of marine vertebrates. Tracking efforts towards seabirds usually focus on their breeding period, tagging adults in colonies. In this study, we tracked four juvenile and one adult Magellanic penguin (Spheniscus magellanicus) with satellite transmitters. These individuals were caught incidentally in gillnets and were tagged at sea, with the exception of the adult that was rehabilitated and released on the beach. The penguins were tracked in their wintering grounds, where behavior and oceanographic characteristics of the area used were determined. All five birds remained along the coast of southern Brazil and Uruguay in neritic waters up to 10 km offshore and 50 m in depth. The four juveniles used a mean area of 1,426 km
2 , travelling on average at 7.4 km/h. The high turning angles observed and mean sinuosity of 2.46 indicated that the penguins were foraging. The adult penguin covered an area of 1,033 km2 , at a mean speed of 4.6 km/h, and with low sinuosity (0.43), which is suggestive of either travelling movements or an experienced hunter who needs a few turning angles to forage. The adult travelled 538 km in total, reaching a maximal distance of 465 km. Locations were obtained over a period of 7–10 days, and all five penguins remained in waters of the coastal branch of the Malvinas Current, an area characterized by cold sea surface temperatures (SST, mean = 13.4 °C) and high primary productivity. Salinity values (34.06 PSU) were also typical of the Malvinas Current and were influenced by the La Plata River plume, whose waters are low in salinity and nutrient rich. All five penguins remained near the coast probably because these waters are rich in nutrients, and carry the penguins' main prey, the Argentine anchovy (Engraulis anchoita). Regarding conservation concerns involving these penguins, we highlight the current management of the anchovy fisheries and the development of offshore windfarms that could potentially cause major disturbances to the penguins' foraging habitat. The establishment of the Albardão National Park in the nearshore area used by the penguins is highly desirable for the protection of the species and their feeding resources. • Magellanic penguins in wintering areas stay over inner shelf waters, at a <50 m depth. • Hidden Markov models, high turning angles and sinuosity indicate intense foraging. • One released, rehabilitated penguin exhibited abnormal behaviour, likely with no foraging. • Birds stayed over the Malvinas Current under the influence of coastal, nutrient-rich waters. • Characteristics of penguin areas are the same as those of Argentine anchovy areas, its main prey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. An immunomarking method to determine the foraging patterns of Osmia cornifrons and resulting fruit set in a cherry orchard.
- Author
-
Biddinger, David, Joshi, Neelendra, Rajotte, Edwin, Halbrendt, Noemi, Pulig, Cassandra, Naithani, Kusum, and Vaughan, Mace
- Subjects
- *
OSMIA , *ORCHARDS , *FORAGING behavior , *EGG whites , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay - Abstract
The foraging patterns of Osmia cornifrons (Radoszkowski) (Megachilidae, Hymenoptera) were determined with an immunomarking method and correlated with fruit set in a commercial tart cherry orchard in Pennsylvania. Adults of O. cornifrons were self-marked with chicken egg-white protein powder from a dispenser nest box placed at the center of the study orchard at early bloom. Flower samples were collected from randomly selected trees ( n = 30) located at different distances from the nest box. Flowers were analyzed for the presence of immunomarker protein with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Foraging patterns were determined by measuring the distance and direction of marked flowers from the nest box. While marked flowers were found out to 55 m (maximum distance sampled), most marked flowers were found within 35 m from the nest and the percentage of marked flowers declined rapidly beyond that distance. Fruit density per limb cross-sectional area (cm) in the study orchard was significantly higher than in the orchard without O. cornifrons, indicating the value of O. cornifrons as pollinators in increasing fruit yield in tart cherries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Temporal consistency and individual specialization in resource use by green turtles in successive life stages.
- Author
-
Vander Zanden, Hannah, Bjorndal, Karen, and Bolten, Alan
- Subjects
- *
GREEN turtle , *COMPETITION (Biology) , *ECOLOGICAL niche , *AQUATIC animal behavior , *ISOTOPIC analysis - Abstract
Not all individuals in a population use the same subset of dietary and habitat resources. Patterns of individual specialization have been documented in an increasing number of organisms, but often without an associated time scale over which niche specialization was observed. We examined the patterns in individual resource use through time and in relation to the population with metrics of temporal consistency and degree of individual specialization. We used stable isotope analysis of carbon and nitrogen in successive subsections of scute tissue from the carapace to compare foraging patterns in three successive life stages of the green turtle ( Chelonia mydas). Temporal consistency was measured as the mean within-individual variation in stable isotope values through time, whereas the degree of individual specialization was a ratio of the individual variation to that of the population. The distinction between these two parameters is important, as the metric of temporal consistency quantifies the regularity of individual resource use, and the degree of individual specialization indicates what proportion of the population niche an average individual uses. The scute record retains a chronological history of resource use and was estimated to represent a minimum 0.8 years in juveniles to a maximum of 6.5 years in adults. Both temporal consistency and individual specialization varied significantly among life stages. Adults were highly consistent in resource use through time and formed a generalist population with individual specialists maintaining long-term patterns in resource use. Oceanic and neritic juvenile life stages exhibited less temporal consistency in resource use with less individual specialization than adults. These observations are important when considering the ecological roles filled by green turtles in each life stage; also, individual differences in resource use may result in differential fitness consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The blame game: Using eDNA to identify species-specific tree browsing by red deer (Cervus elaphus) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) in a temperate forest
- Author
-
van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S., Leigh-Moy, Kieran, Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M., Spong, Göran, Lebeau, Leo C., Heurich, Marco, van Beeck Calkoen, Suzanne T.S., Leigh-Moy, Kieran, Cromsigt, Joris P.G.M., Spong, Göran, Lebeau, Leo C., and Heurich, Marco
- Abstract
Increasing deer populations in many temperate regions can affect tree regeneration, resulting in severe long-term impacts on forest structure, composition and diversity. Of the most common deer species in Europe — red deer (Cervus elaphus) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) — roe deer are generally thought to have the highest impact on palatable tree species owing to their feeding niche. Although browsing and its potential consequences are well researched, less is known about the influence of specific deer species within multi-species ungulate communities on specific tree species. Environmental DNA (eDNA) allows the determination of species-specific browsing habits without the need for direct observations, facilitating effective targeting of management interventions. In this study eDNA was used to elucidate the browsing patterns of these two deer species in the temperate forest of the Bavarian Forest National Park, Germany and analysed the influence of tree species, management type and height of browsing, on the success rate of the method. Samples were collected from twigs used in feeding trials from enclosures containing red deer or roe deer and from naturally browsed twigs in three different management types within the national park. eDNA was successfully amplified from 98% of the feeding trial samples, and the correct deer species was identified for all samples. eDNA was successfully amplified from approximately 50% of the naturally browsed samples. Neither management type, tree species, nor height of browsing had any significant influence on the success of the method. For silver fir and rowan, no significant difference was found in the proportion of browsing events attributable to roe or red deer, when the two deer species occur at similar densities. These results indicate that roe deer might not always be disproportionately responsible for the browsing of palatable tree species as expected from its food niche. Roe deer were significantly more responsible for br
- Published
- 2019
32. Browsed twig environmental DNA: diagnostic PCR to identify ungulate species.
- Author
-
NICHOLS, RUTH V., KÖNIGSSON, HELENA, DANELL, KJELL, and SPONG, GÖRAN
- Subjects
- *
MOLECULAR ecology , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *PLANT communities , *NUTRIENT cycles , *ANIMAL communities , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *WILDLIFE management - Abstract
Ungulate browsing can have a strong effect on ecological processes by affecting plant community structure and composition, with cascading effects on nutrient cycling and animal communities. However, in the absence of direct observations of foraging, species-specific foraging behaviours are difficult to quantify. We therefore know relatively little about foraging competition and species-specific browsing patterns in systems with several browsers. However, during browsing, a small amount of saliva containing buccal cells is deposited at the bite site, providing a source of environmental DNA (eDNA) that can be used for species identification. Here, we describe extraction and PCR protocols for a browser species diagnostic kit. Species-specific primers for mitochondrial DNA were optimized and validated using twigs browsed by captive animals. A time series showed that about 50% of the samples will amplify up to 12 weeks after the browsing event and that some samples amplify up to 24 weeks after browsing (12.5%). Applied to samples of natural browsing from an area where moose ( Alces alces), roe deer ( Capreolus capreolus), fallow deer ( Cervus dama) and red deer ( Cervus elaphus) are sympatric, amplification success reached 75%. This method promises to greatly improve our understanding of multispecies browsing systems without the need for direct observations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Common factors influence bee foraging in urban and wildland landscapes.
- Author
-
Wojcik, Victoria and McBride, Joe
- Subjects
BEES ,FORAGING behavior ,WILDERNESS areas ,CALIFORNIA poppy ,URBAN ecology - Abstract
Bees are important flower-visiting insects that display differential occurrences at food resources throughout urban and wildland landscapes. This study examined the visitation rates and foraging patterns of eight taxonomic groups of bees that are common to California poppies, Eschscholzia californica, in both landscape types. Bee occurrence was documented in relation to floral resource characteristics (patch area, poppy coverage, and poppy density), local landscape characteristics (distance to the wildland-urban interface, distance to riparian areas, distance to green space, and land use), and regional landscape context (urban versus wildland). Similar abundance and richness measures were recorded at both urban and wildland poppy patches, but community composition varied in each landscape. Bumble bees were more abundant at poppies in the wildland whereas species in the family Halictidae (sweat bees) were more abundant at poppies within the urban landscape. Resource patch size and density consistently correlated with increased bee presence for all bee types foraging in the wildland. Individual patterns of occurrence in the urban landscape were somewhat divergent; the foraging dynamics of larger bodied-bees ( Bombus vosnesenskii and Megachile species) correlated significantly with resource patch size and density, whereas smaller-bodied bees (family Halictidae and Andrena species) were influenced by landscape characteristics such as distance to the wildland-urban interface and distance to riparian areas. In summary, the surrounding landscape had an influence on community composition, but the magnitude of the floral resource present at a site and factors relating to foraging energetics were dominant drivers of local occurrence. These results suggest that management strategies that provide dense and abundant floral resources should be successful in attracting bees, irrespective of their location within the urban matrix. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Spatial patterns in the use of foraging areas and its relationship with prey resources in the threatened Olrog's Gull ( Larus atlanticus).
- Author
-
Suárez, Nicolás, Retana, María, and Yorio, Pablo
- Subjects
- *
FORAGING behavior , *SEA birds , *GULLS , *ANIMAL radio tracking - Abstract
Olrog's Gull Larus atlanticus is a threatened species which feeds during the breeding season almost exclusively on crabs. We studied the use of foraging areas and its relationship with prey resources in Olrog's Gulls breeding at Bahía San Blas, Argentina. Feeding areas were identified by radio-tracking 10 and 12 birds in 2006 and 2007, respectively (458 and 574 foraging trips, respectively) and monitoring 120 color-marked individuals during 2007 (3,447 locations). Feeding habitats were classified using dominant substrate and structural characteristics, and prey availability was assessed by sampling 2,220 1-m quadrates distributed throughout gull potential feeding areas. Both telemetry and monitoring of marked individuals indicated that gulls used 20 km of coastline but foraged mainly in three sectors located between 1.5 and 7 km north of the colony. During both years, the use of feeding areas varied throughout the breeding cycle, with a higher use of areas closer to the colony during the chick stage. Results showed a differential distribution of crab species depending on habitat type, with a dominance of Cyrtograpsus altimanus in structured environments and Neohelice granulata in muddy substrates with vegetation. During incubation, gulls mostly used areas characterized by high densities of N. granulata, while during the early chick stage they mostly used sectors with high densities of C. altimanus. Prey size varied among crab species, C. altimanus being significantly smaller. Changes in Olrog's Gull use of coastal areas appear to be determined by the seasonal change in trophic requirements of adults and chicks, given the spatial segregation of their prey in relation to habitat characteristics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Patrones de actividad forrajera y tamaño de nido de Acromyrmex lobicornis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) en una zona urbana de San Luis, Argentina.
- Author
-
Jofré, Laura E. and Medina, Ana I.
- Subjects
- *
LEAF-cutting ants , *FORAGING behavior , *INSECTS & climate , *ACROMYRMEX , *COLONIES (Biology) , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Many factors can affect the foraging activity of leaf- cutting ants. However, climatic factors, especially temperature, could be considered the most important in temperate regions. In this work, we measured foraging activity and nest size in four colonies of Acromyrmex lobicornis Emery located in Juana Koslay, San Luis. Foraging activity was determined by the number of ants carrying plant fragments that entered the nest per unit time during a year. In each opportunity air and soil temperature were measured. To estimate nest size we used foraging area, mound diameter and number of workers in each colony. Foraging activity and air and soil temperature correlated in every month of the year except February, July and December. However, the correlation was positive during October, May, June, August and September, and negative in November, January, March and April. The nests showed activity all the year, but diurnal in winter and nocturnal in summer. The temperature and the nest size are factors that influence the foraging activity of A. lobicornis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
36. Influence of food availability and distribution on the movement patterns of a forest avian frugivore, the puff-throated bulbul (Alophoixus pallidus).
- Author
-
Khamcha, Daphawan, Savini, Tommaso, Brockleman, Warren Y., Chimchome, Vijak, and Gale, George A.
- Abstract
Bulbul species (family Pycnonotidae) are important seed dispersers in Asian forests, but almost nothing is known of their movement patterns inside intact forest, which are likely to impact forest dynamics. We examined the movement patterns of the forest-dwelling puff-throated bulbul (Alophoixus pallidus) in relation to fruit productivity and distribution of fruiting trees/lianas in an evergreen forest in north-eastern Thailand. Movement patterns of 10 groups were precisely mapped by following colour-ringed individuals in each group 4 h mo−1 for 1 y. We evaluated fruit productivity and dispersion of fruiting trees/lianas based on monthly phenologies. There were clear seasonal fluctuations in fruit availability, which appeared to affect movement patterns, particularly distance moved between fruiting trees, time spent feeding and food selection. When fruit availability was low, bulbuls spent more time on average at a given food plant and moved longer distances between fruiting plants than compared with periods of higher fruit availability (low availability: 58 s, 83.2 m; high availability: 10 s, 43.4 m). This study points to the importance of seasonal availability of fruit resources on frugivore movement patterns. Seasonal dynamics of movement may be useful for understanding interactions between fruiting trees and their dispersers, and forest tree recruitment patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Seasonal dynamics of guild structure in a bird assemblage of the central Monte desert.
- Author
-
Lopez de Casenave, Javier, Cueto, Víctor R., and Marone, Luis
- Subjects
ECOLOGY ,ENVIRONMENTAL sciences ,BIOLOGY ,ENVIRONMENT (Aesthetics) - Abstract
Copyright of Basic & Applied Ecology is the property of Urban & Fischer Verlag and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Assessing impacts of large herbivores on shrubs: tests of scaling factors for utilization rates from shoot-level measurements.
- Author
-
BILYEU, DANIELLE M., COOPER, DAVID J., and HOBBS, N. THOMPSON
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL-plant relationships , *PLANT development , *HERBIVORES , *PLANT shoots , *SHRUBS , *WOODY plants , *WILLOWS - Abstract
1. Accurate methods for estimating the intensity of browsing by herbivores are fundamental to understanding the ecology of shrub communities. Quantifying browse utilization on shrubs at large scales is difficult because shrubs have complex, spatially variable growth forms. Most existing methods estimate browsing rate at the scale of linear current-year shoots or twigs. How such fine-scale estimates relate to the proportion of current-year growth consumed from whole plants or plots is often unknown. The relationship is likely to be complex because herbivores selectively browse more productive plants and plant parts. 2. Using a clipping experiment designed to mimic elk Cervus elaphus browsing, we quantified how utilization estimates at the scale of individual current-year shoots of two willow species, Salix bebbiana and Salix geyeriana, relate to actual mass removed at the scale of rooted stems. Three approaches to scaling were examined: (i) taking an average, (ii) multiplying by the proportion of shoots clipped and (iii) multiplying by a novel scaling factor that weights utilization by productivity. To address how to scale-up from stems to plots, we applied the most accurate stem-level method to elk-browsed willow and compared plot-level estimates by two scaling approaches. 3. In scaling from shoots to stems, the novel scaling factor was most successful and resulted in accurate estimates for up to c. 45% of current annual growth clipped. In scaling from the stem to the plot, elk preference for more productive stems caused a simple average of stem-level utilization to differ from a productivity-weighted average by 15%. 4. Synthesis and applications. In order to reflect accurately the proportion of biomass consumed at a whole-plant level, fine-scale estimates of utilization should be weighted by an estimate of pre-browse productivity, as this is mathematically equivalent to summing pre-browse and post-browse mass before calculating the proportion consumed. In developing methods to estimate utilization at plot scales, an important consideration is the choice of sampling unit, which should be both amenable to unbiased sampling and tractable in terms of measuring productivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Fruits foraging patterns and seed dispersal effect of frugivorous birds on Hippophae rhamnoides sinensis.
- Author
-
Lu, Xianwen, Sun, Kun, Ma, Ruijun, Zhang, Hui, Su, Xue, and Wang, Mingli
- Abstract
Behaviors of 18 species of birds eating fruits of Hippophae rhamnoides spp. sinensis were observed from September 2003 to March 2004. Their foraging patterns were found to be very different and can be divided into five classes: (1) direct swallowing the fruits on crown of the shrubs and sometimes regurgitating seeds soon after; (2) carrying the fruits to their perching sites and swallowing; (3) pecking the fruits from the shrubs to the ground, eating pulp and seeds but leaving pericarp; (4) pecking through the pericarp, eating pulp and leaving pericarp and seeds; (5) pecking through the pericarp on the top of fruits, and only eating seeds. These foraging patterns have different effects on seed dispersal of H. rhamnoides spp. sinensis. The germination experiment of three groups of seeds (seeds from feces, dry fruits and extracted seeds from dry fruits) was carried out. Although ingestion processes of birds had some adverse effects on the seed germination of H. rhamnoides spp. sinensis, the seeds from feces still have a relatively higher germination ratio. H. rhamnoides spp. sinensis provides food to a variety of frugivorous birds, and the birds disperse its seeds. Thus, a mutually beneficial relationship between the bird and the seed is formed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. FORAGING PATTERNS AND PREY SELECTION IN AN INCREASING AND EXPANDING SEA OTTER POPULATION.
- Author
-
Laidre, Kristin L. and Jameson, Ronald J.
- Subjects
- *
SEA otter , *ENHYDRA , *PREDATION , *PREDATORY animals , *HABITATS - Abstract
Focal observations of sea otter (Enhydra lutris kenyoni) foraging patterns and prey selection were collected in coastal Washington between 1993 and 1999. Records consisted of 13,847 individual dives from 841 feeding bouts ranging from 1 min to >4 h. Average dive time was 55 s ± (1.9 SE and average surface time was 45 s ± 2.3 SE, irrespective of dive success. At least 77% of all dives (n = 10,636) were successful prey captures (dives in low light or of undetermined success were excluded). Prey capture success was significantly lower for subadults (63% ± 5 SE) than adults (82% ± 1 SE; P < 0.001). Sea otters occupying the established population range on the outer coast of Washington fed heavily on bivalves (63%) and had a diverse diet consisting of several prey groups (n = 10). In contrast, sea otters occupying new habitat in the Strait of Juan de Fuca had a restricted diet dominated by >60% red urchins (Strongylocentrotus franciscanus), with only 2 other prey species comprising >10% of their diet. Prey size and prey category were dominant predictor variables in generalized linear models of dive duration and postdive surface duration on successful dives. Significant increases in areal extent of surface canopy of giant kelp (Macrocystis integrifolia) and bull kelp (Nereocystis leutkeana) were found both in the outer coast and the Strait of Juan de Fuca (0.4-0.5 km² per year, P < 0.05) and suggest increasing suitable habitat for a growing population. The growth and expansion of a small and isolated sea otter population provides a unique opportunity to examine the relationship between dietary diversity and population status and explore similarities and differences between trophic paradigms established for sea otter populations at other localities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Effects of Pollen Availability and Nosema Infection During the Spring on Division of Labor and Survival of Worker Honey Bees (Hymenoptera: Apidae).
- Author
-
Mattila, H. R. and Otis, G. W.
- Subjects
NOSEMA ,HONEYBEES ,COLONIES (Biology) ,POLLEN ,NOSEMATIDAE ,INSECT societies ,ENTOMOLOGY ,INSECT populations - Abstract
Honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) colonies in temperate climates often deplete winter pollen stores because of intense brood rearing activity in the spring. Nutritional stress can be exacerbated by a simultaneous spring peak in the incidence of the mid-gut parasite Nosema apis Zander in workers. We examined the effect of pollen supply in colonies during the spring on longevity, in-hive behavior, and foraging patterns of Nosema-infected and uninfected workers. In field colonies, pollen supplements did not offset the reduction in worker lifespan caused by inoculation with N. apis, a result that contradicts previous research that showed that increased access to pollen can improve the longevity of N. apis-inoculated workers in cage trials. This discrepancy is likely related to differences in the activity of workers in colonies versus cages; surplus nutrients in colonies were allocated to increased brood rearing activity, which presumably diverted resources away from improving the performance of infected workers in colonies. Trends were reversed when workers were transferred to a common observation hive as adults after being reared in field colonies with pollen supplements or limited pollen; pollen availability in the parental colony affected worker lifespan and the effects of N. apis status were negligible. Workers from colonies that had pollen-diet supplements lived longer, were more likely to be found in the brood area, and were more active on the comb than workers reared in colonies with less access to pollen. Pollen availability and inoculation status did not affect brood care behavior or foraging patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The structure of a micro-bat community in relation to gradients of environmental variation in a tropical urban area.
- Author
-
Hourigan, C. L., Johnson, C., and Robson, S. K. A.
- Subjects
BATS ,HABITATS ,ANIMAL ecology ,ANABAT bat detection systems ,FORAGING behavior ,VEGETATION & climate - Abstract
We investigated patterns of community structure (species composition, foraging activity, and nightly foraging patterns) of bats in relation to gradients of environmental variation in a tropical urban area. A total of 32 sites spread equally across eight habitat types were sampled in the city of Townsville, North Queensland, Australia. Each site was sampled on 3 non-consecutive occasions using automated AnaBat systems. Eleven species were confidently identified while a possible four more were identified only to the genus level. Ordination of environmental variables measured at these sites identified two distinct environmental gradients reflecting the degree of urbanisation and foliage density. With increasing urbanisation there was a decline in species richness and total foraging activity. We used regression trees to characterise foraging preferences of each species. This analysis suggested that only one species of Mormopterus was able to exploit the resources provided by urbanisation. This species foraged in areas with higher numbers of white streetlights. The remaining species of bats preferred to forage within close proximity to natural vegetation and with low numbers of streetlights. The density of vegetation in long-established suburbs did not substantially reverse the trend for urban areas to have fewer bat species than original habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Shags in Antarctica: their feeding behaviour and ecological role in the marine food web.
- Author
-
Casaux, Ricardo and Barrera-Oro, Esteban
- Subjects
SHAG (Bird) ,FORAGING behavior ,PELECANIFORMES ,CORMORANTS ,BIRDS ,FISHES ,PREDATORY animals ,SURVIVAL behavior (Animals) - Abstract
Feeding behaviour, ecological role in the marine food web and population trends of the Antarctic shag Phalacrocorax bransfieldensis and the South Georgia shag P. georgianus in Antarctica are analysed. The diving depths and duration recorded for these shags are the deepest and longest among all flying birds in Antarctica and match deep dives performed by small Antarctic penguins. Individual shags of both sexes partition foraging depths and food resources, which might diminish intra-specific competition. Like other sub-Antarctic shags, P. bransfieldensis and P. georgianus are bottom feeders that prey predominantly on demersal fish. In the southern Scotia Arc and west Antarctic Peninsula, nototheniids, mainly Notothenia coriiceps, constitute their main prey. Shag partners alternate the time at sea and, as the energy requirements at the nest increase, they increase the number but reduce the duration of the feeding trips. A steady declining trend in the number of breeding pairs of both species has been observed in the last decade at several Antarctic localities; this phenomenon at the South Shetland Islands might be at least partially explained by the effect of the commercial fishery on their prey. In inshore shallow waters shags occupy the trophic niche of main predators of demersal fish and play an important ecological role as regulators of populations of particular fish prey that have marked site fidelity. The potential use of shags as biomonitors in Antarctica is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Effects of body size on the diurnal activity budgets of African browsing ruminants.
- Author
-
Du Toit, J. T. and Yetman, C. A.
- Subjects
- *
RUMINANTS , *BODY size , *CIRCADIAN rhythms , *FORAGING behavior , *UNGULATES - Abstract
We compared the diurnal activity budgets of four syntopic species of African browsing ruminant that differ widely in body size. These were concurrently studied through all phases of the seasonal cycle, in the same area, using the same methods. We tested five predictions from the literature on how body size is expected to influence the behaviour of tropical ungulates: the smallest members of the browsing ruminant guild exhibit (1) the lowest allocation of diurnal time to activity; (2) the greatest hour-to-hour variation in activity and resting time; (3) the greatest reduction in activity time during the hottest days; (4) the least change between wet and the dry seasons in the ratio of feeding: ruminating time; and (5) the greatest time budget allocation to vigilance. Prediction 1 was supported in that the smaller species spent less time being active during the day. Prediction 2 was also supported in that the smaller species were more variable in their relative allocations of time to activity and resting through successive hours of the day. Contrary to Prediction 3, however, the greatest reduction in activity with increasing temperature was found for the largest guild member. The smaller species can achieve their daily food intake requirements by feeding at night and in the cool hours of the day, while the larger species have to feed during all hours of the day and are thus more susceptible to thermoregulatory constraints on foraging. Prediction 4 was partially upheld in that the largest species (giraffe) displayed the widest variation in feeding: ruminating time through the seasonal cycle. Prediction 5 was not supported, indicating that multiple factors interact with body size in determining vigilance behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Coupled computational simulation and empirical research into the foraging system of Pharaoh’s ant (Monomorium pharaonis)
- Author
-
Jackson, Duncan, Holcombe, Mike, and Ratnieks, Francis
- Subjects
- *
HYMENOPTERA , *INSECT societies , *INSECT behavior , *ANIMAL social behavior - Abstract
The Pharaoh’s ant (Monomorium pharaonis), a significant pest in many human environments, is phenomenally successful at locating and exploiting available food resources. Several pheromones are utilized in the self-organized foraging of this ant but most aspects of the overall system are poorly characterised. Agent-based modelling of ants as individual complex X-machines facilitates study of the mechanisms underlying the emergence of trails and aids understanding of the process. Conducting simultaneous modelling, and simulation, alongside empirical biological studies is shown to drive the research by formulating hypotheses that must be tested before the model can be verified and extended. Integration of newly characterised behavioural processes into the overall model will enable testing of general theories giving insight into division of labour within insect societies. This study aims to establish a new paradigm in computational modelling applicable to all types of multi-agent biological systems, from tissues to animal societies, as a powerful tool to accelerate basic research. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The blame game: Using eDNA to identify species-specific tree browsing by red deer (Cervus elaphus) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) in a temperate forest
- Author
-
Joris P. G. M. Cromsigt, Leo C. Lebeau, Suzanne T.S. van Beeck Calkoen, Kieran Leigh-Moy, Göran Spong, and Marco Heurich
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Ungulate ,National park ,Wildlife ,Zoology ,Temperate forest ,Forestry ,Environmental DNA ,15. Life on land ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Roe deer ,Capreolus ,Browsing patterns ,biology.animal ,Wildlife management ,Deer browsing ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Foraging patterns - Abstract
Increasing deer populations in many temperate regions can affect tree regeneration, resulting in severe long-term impacts on forest structure, composition and diversity. Of the most common deer species in Europe — red deer (Cervus elaphus) and roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) — roe deer are generally thought to have the highest impact on palatable tree species owing to their feeding niche. Although browsing and its potential consequences are well researched, less is known about the influence of specific deer species within multi-species ungulate communities on specific tree species. Environmental DNA (eDNA) allows the determination of species-specific browsing habits without the need for direct observations, facilitating effective targeting of management interventions. In this study eDNA was used to elucidate the browsing patterns of these two deer species in the temperate forest of the Bavarian Forest National Park, Germany and analysed the influence of tree species, management type and height of browsing, on the success rate of the method. Samples were collected from twigs used in feeding trials from enclosures containing red deer or roe deer and from naturally browsed twigs in three different management types within the national park. eDNA was successfully amplified from 98% of the feeding trial samples, and the correct deer species was identified for all samples. eDNA was successfully amplified from approximately 50% of the naturally browsed samples. Neither management type, tree species, nor height of browsing had any significant influence on the success of the method. For silver fir and rowan, no significant difference was found in the proportion of browsing events attributable to roe or red deer, when the two deer species occur at similar densities. These results indicate that roe deer might not always be disproportionately responsible for the browsing of palatable tree species as expected from its food niche. Roe deer were significantly more responsible for browsing at lower heights than red deer. Although not statistically significant, roe deer were more responsible for browsing in intact forest compared to bark-beetle-impact forest, with the opposite relationship for red deer.
- Published
- 2019
47. Herbivory patterns and cooccurrence of leaf-cutting ants in afforestation and natural areas in the Lower Delta of the Paraná River, Argentina
- Author
-
Jiménez, Nadia Lis, Calcaterra, Luis Alberto, Farji-Brener, Alejandro Gustavo, and Farji Brener, Alejandro Gustavo
- Subjects
CUANTIFICACIÓN DE DAÑO ,NIVEL DE DAÑO ECONOMICO ,DAMAGE QUANTIFICATION ,FORAGING PATTERNS ,PREFERENCE ,Ecología ,SALICACEAE ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https] ,Ciencias Biológicas ,LEAF-CUTTING ANTS ,BAJO DELTA DEL RIO PARANA ,PATRONES DE FORRAJEO ,Cuantificacion de Daño ,THERMAL TOLERANCE ,LEVEL OF ECONOMIC DAMAGE ,LOWER DELTA OF THE PARANA RIVER ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1.6 [https] ,TOLERANCIA TERMICA ,PREFERENCIA ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,HORMIGAS CORTADORAS DE HOJAS - Abstract
Las hormigas cortadoras de hojas (HCH, géneros Atta y Acromyrmex) son una de las plagas forestales más importantes debido a los daños económicos que ocasionan tanto por defoliación como por los gastos que implica su control. La región del Bajo Delta del Río Paraná posee extensas plantaciones de sauces (Salix spp.) y álamos (Populus spp.), hábitat de dos especies simpátricas de HCH, Acromyrmex lundii y A. ambiguus. El objetivo fue estimar el daño y determinar los factores que influyen sobre la preferencia e intensidad de defoliación de estas HCH en forestaciones recién implantadas, así como estudiar factores bióticos y abióticos que puedan explicar la coexistencia de ambas especies de HCH en esta región. Se estudiaron sus patrones de actividad de forrajeo y cosecha en la Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Delta del Paraná- INTA (EEA INTA Delta). En las estaciones extremas presentaron comportamiento similar, forrajeando en invierno en las horas más cálidas y en verano por las noches; mientras que en primavera A. lundii acarreó el triple de material vegetal seco (30,1 gr) a lo largo del día. En otoño, A. lundii colectó material durante todo el día mientras que A. ambiguus sólo durante las horas más cálidas. Las temperaturas de inicio y cese de actividad de las obreras registradas en los senderos se compararon con los límites mínimos (TCmín) y máximos (TCmáx) de tolerancia térmica de las obreras de ambas especies en el laboratorio. El intervalo de tolerancia térmica de A. lundii fue mayor (3,2- 45,9 °C) y contuvo al de A. ambiguus (4,5- 45,0 °C). Las temperaturas mínimas en campo fueron mayores a la TCmín y las máximas fueron menores al TCmáx, es decir, las obreras forrajearon siempre dentro de sus límites térmicos. Por otra parte, ambas especies se recuperaron de manera similar luego de permanecer 1 y 3 horas a 0 °C. En laboratorio se analizó la preferencia de A. lundii y A. ambiguus hacia diferentes clones de sauce y álamo en relación a dos especies nativas de plantas (sauce criollo y ceibo), encontrando que los sauces fueron más seleccionados que los álamos y éstos, a su vez, que el ceibo. Con el fin de determinar estas preferencias a campo, se instaló una plantación con cuatro clones comerciales de sauce en la EEA- INTA Delta y se la siguió durante cinco años. Se observó que el daño en el follaje, producto del ataque de las HCH, afectó negativamente el crecimiento en altura y en diámetro y el volumen de madera producido de los clones, siendo mayor las pérdidas en dos de ellos (76- 93 % de pérdida en volumen de madera al quinto año). Los efectos del daño fueron más importantes durante los tres primeros años, para luego estabilizarse. Se estimó además el nivel de daño económico (11 nidos/ha) y el umbral de acción (3 nidos /ha) para A. lundii, en el primer año de una plantación de Salix nigra 4 en Entre Ríos. Ambos valores son importantes para el manejo y un requisito fundamental para obtener la certificación forestal (FSC). Por último, se determinó el impacto poblacional de acuerdo a las densidades de nidos por hectáreas en forestaciones, matrices de forestaciones y ambientes naturales. Acromyrmex lundii y A. ambiguus generaron un impacto anual de 83 y 26 kg/ha de material seco recolectado, respectivamente. Este trabajo aporta datos novedosos de la historia natural de dos especies simpátricas de HCH, e información relevante para su manejo y control en plantaciones forestales del Bajo Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina. Leaf-cutting ants (LCA, Atta and Acromyrmex genera) are one of the most important forestry pests due to the economic damages caused by defoliation as well as the costs caused by their control. The Lower Delta of the Paraná River region, habitat of two sympatric species of LCA, Acromyrmex lundii and A. ambiguus has extensive plantations of willows (Salix spp.) and poplars (Populus spp.). The objective was to estimate the damage and determine the factors that influence the preference and intensity of defoliation of these LCA in newly implanted forestations, as well as to study biotic and abiotic factors that may explain the co-existence of both LCA species in this region. The foraging and harvesting activity patterns of both LCA species were studied in the Agricultural Experimental Station Delta of Parana- INTA (EEA INTA Delta). During extreme seasons, they presented a similar behavior, foraging in winter in the warmest hours and in summer at night; while in spring A. lundii carried three times more dry plant material (30.1 gr) throughout the day. In autumn, A. lundii harvested throughout the day while A. ambiguus only during the warmest hours. The temperatures of initiation and cessation of activity in the field were compared with the minimum (CTmin) and maximum (CTmax) limits of thermal tolerance of the workers of both species measured at the laboratory. The thermal tolerance interval of A. lundii was higher (3.2- 45.9 °C) and contained that of A. ambiguus (4.5- 45.0 °C). Workers did not reach their thermal limits in the field: minimum temperatures were higher than the CTmin and maximum temperatures were lower that the CTmax. On the other hand, both species recovered similarly after remaining 1 and 3 hours at 0 °C. In the laboratory, the preference of A. lundii and A. ambiguus was analyzed for different clones of willow and poplar in relation with two native plant species (native willow and ceibo tree), finding that the willows were more selected than poplars and these more than the ceibo tree. In order to determine these preferences in the field, a plantation with four commercial clones of willow was established in the EEAINTA Delta and studied for five years. It was observed that leaf damage caused by the LCA attack negatively affected the growth in height and diameter and the volume of wood produced by the clones, with greater losses in two of them (76- 93 % loss in wood volume in the fifth year). The damage effects were more important during the first three years of implantation, and then it stabilized. The level of economic damage was estimated (11 nests/ha) and the action threshold (3 nests/ha) for A. lundii in the first year of a Salix nigra 4 plantation in Entre Ríos. Both values are important for management and a fundamental requirement to obtain a forestry certification (FSC). Finally, the population impact was determined according to the nests densities per hectare in afforestation, afforestation matrix and natural environments. Acromyrmex lundii and A. ambiguus generated an annual impact of 83 and 26 kg/ha of dry material collected, respectively. This work provides novel data on the natural history of two sympatric species of LCA, and relevant information for their management and control in forest plantations in the Lower Delta of the Paraná River, Argentina. Fil: Jiménez, Nadia Lis. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Fundación para el Estudio de Especies Invasivas; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Departamento de Ecología, Genética y Evolución; Argentina
- Published
- 2019
48. Annual foraging of the leaf-cutting ant Atta colombica in a semideciduous rain forest in Panama.
- Author
-
Wirth, Rainer, Beyschlag, Wolfram, Ryel, Ronald J., and Hölldobler, Bert
- Abstract
In a 1-y study of vegetation harvested by the leaf-cutting ants, Atta colombica Guérin, daily harvesting activity of two nests was observed for 24 h at c. 1-wk intervals (colony I: June 1993-June 1994; colony II: February-June 1994) on Barro Colorado Island. The average daily quantity of green leaves harvested by colony I was higher during the wet season (11.4 m2 d−1) than during the dry season (9.0 m2 d−1), but was highly variable between survey days. Total annual herbivory of green leaves was estimated to be 3,855 m2 foliage area for colony I and 1,707 m2 for colony II. Total dry weight of biomass harvested was higher in the dry season because most material collected during the wet season consisted of green leaves, while during the dry season, more than 50% of the total collected biomass was non-green plant material (stipules of Ficus sp., fruits, seeds, and flower parts of a variety of other species) which represented c. one third (111 kg y−1) of the total annual intake (370 kg y−1) of plant material. Total daily biomass intake was negatively correlated with daytime rainfall. The peak of daily foraging was affected by timing and duration of rainfall events. Highest input rates normally occurred between 15:00 and 16:00 h (colony I).Dry weight and surface area of harvested leaf fragments differed between plant species, with thicker leaves generally being cut into smaller pieces. Significant linear correlations were found between total daily harvest of fragments and the respective harvesting rate at the maximum of daily activity. High correspondence was found between estimates using this relationship and the measured daily leaf harvest of four other Atta colonies and of two colonies reported in published literature. The use of this relationship as a research tool is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Foraging behavior of specialist and generalist caterpillars on plantain ( Plantago lanceolata) altered by predatory stinkbugs.
- Author
-
Stamp, Nancy and Bowers, M.
- Abstract
To examine the effects of predators and plant genotype on the behavior, patterns of herbivory, growth and survivorship of caterpillars, we used an experimental garden in which we contrasted two hostplant genotypes of plantain ( Plantago lanceolata), two kinds of herbivores (specialist Junonia coenia vs. generalist Pyrrharctia isabella) and two levels of caterpillar predation (with and without Podisus maculiventris stinkbugs). Each of the replicate plots per treatment contained two plants of the same genotype. The stinkbugs reduced the survivorship of the specialist caterpillars but not that of the generalists, which reflects the differences in predatoravoidance behaviors of these species. Nonetheless, the stinkbugs influenced the behavior of both caterpillar species. When stinkbugs were present, both specialist and generalist caterpillars were less likely to be found on the plant upon which they were initially placed (='initial' plant), and they were more likely to be off both plants within the plot than larvae in the absence of predators. Consequently in the presence of the stinkbug predators, the proportion of the 'initial' plants consumed was less than in the absence of the predators. Plant genotype influenced plant size and the proportion of individual plants eaten, but it did not affect larval location on the plots. Neither presence of predators nor plant genotype had an effect on relative growth rate of the caterpillars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Indirect effect on survivorship of caterpillars due to presence of invertebrate predators.
- Author
-
Stamp, Nancy and Bowers, M.
- Abstract
An indirect effects is defined here as a reduction in prey survivorship as a consequence of a reduction in growth rate of prey due to the presence of a predator that alters prey behavior. A method for partitioning the direct and indirect effects of predators on prey survivorship indicated that predatory wasps ( Polistes sp.:. Vespidae) had both direct and indirect negative effects on survivorship of buckmoth caterpillars ( Hemileuca lucina: Saturniidae). In a field experiment, the direct and indirect effects together accounted for 61% of the mortality of the caterpillars. A third of this reduction in survivorship due to the wasps was attributed to an indirect effect, due to the decreased growth rate of the caterpillars that moved into the interior of the hostplant to escape from the wasps. In contrast, in another field experiment, although predatory stinkbugs ( Podisus maculiventris: Hemiptera) contributed to 56% of the mortality of buckeye caterpillars ( Junonia coenia: Nymphalidae), the indirect effect of stinkbugs on buckeye caterpillars only accounted for 2% of the reduction in survivorship of these caterpillars. These differences in the indirect effect are discussed in particular relative to the behavior of predators and prey, ratio of predator to prey sizes, and morphology of the hostplants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.