Auteurs: Magda E. Chudzinska, Floris M. van Beest, Jesper Madsen, Jacob Nabe-Nielsen
Bron: Oikos Article first published online: 6 FEB 2015 DOI: 10.1111/oik.01881
Abstract: Understanding how animals select for habitat and foraging resources
therein is a crucial component of basic and applied ecology. The
selection process is typically influenced by a variety of environmental
conditions including the spatial and temporal variation in the quantity
and quality of food resources, predation or disturbance risks, and
inter- and intraspecific competition. Indeed, some of the most commonly
employed ecological theories used to describe how animals choose
foraging sites are: nutrient intake maximisation, density-dependent
habitat selection, central-place foraging, and predation risk effects.
Even though these theories are not mutually exclusive, rarely are
multiple theoretical models considered concomitantly to assess which
theory, or combination thereof, best predicts observed changes in
habitat selection over space and time. Here, we tested which of the
above theories best-predicted habitat selection of Svalbard-breeding
pink-footed geese at their main spring migration stopover site in
mid-Norway by computing a series of resource selection functions (RSFs)
and their predictive ability (k-fold cross validation scores).
At this stopover site geese fuel intensively as a preparation for
breeding and further migration.
We found that the predation risk model
and a combination of the density-dependent and central-place foraging
models best-predicted habitat selection during stopover as geese
selected for larger fields where predation risk is typically lower and
selection for foraging sites changed as a function of both distance to
the roost site (i.e. central-place) and changes in local density. In
contrast to many other studies, the nutritional value of the available
food resources did not appear to be a major limiting factor as geese
used different food resources proportional to their availability. Our
study shows that in an agricultural landscape where nutritional value of
food resources is homogeneously high and resource availability changes
rapidly; foraging behaviour of geese is largely a tradeoff between fast
refuelling and disturbance/predator avoidance.
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