Niche overlap, threshold food densities, and limits to prey depletion for a diving duck assemblage in an estuarine bay
Authored by James R Lovvorn, La Cruz Susan E W De, John Y Takekawa, Laura E Shaskey, Samantha E Richman
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.3354/meps10104
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Flight
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Planning for marine conservation often requires estimates of the amount
of habitat needed to support assemblages of interacting species. During
winter in subtidal San Pablo Bay, California, the 3 main diving duck
species are lesser scaup Aythya affinis (LESC), greater scaup A. marila
(GRSC), and surf scoter Melanitta perspicillata (SUSC), which all feed
almost entirely on the bivalve Corbula amurensis. Decreased body mass
and fat, increased foraging effort, and major departures of these birds
appeared to result from food limitation. Broad overlap in prey size, water depth, and location suggested that the 3 species responded
similarly to availability of the same prey. However, an energetics model
that accounts for differing body size, locomotor mode, and dive behavior
indicated that each species will become limited at different stages of
prey depletion in the order SUSC, then GRSC, then LESC. Depending on
year, 35 to 66\% of the energy in Corbula standing stocks was below
estimated threshold densities for profitable foraging. Ectothermic
predators, especially flounders and sturgeons, could reduce excess
carrying capacity for different duck species by 4 to 10\%. A substantial
quantity of prey above profitability thresholds was not exploited before
most ducks left San Pablo Bay. Such pre-depletion departure has been
attributed in other taxa to foraging aggression. However, in these
diving ducks that showed no overt aggression, this pattern may result
from high costs of locating all adequate prey patches, resulting
reliance on existing flocks to find food, and propensity to stay near
dense flocks to avoid avian predation. For interacting species
assemblages, modeling profitability thresholds can indicate the species
most vulnerable to food declines. However, estimates of total habitat
needed require better understanding of factors affecting the amount of
prey above thresholds that is not depleted before the predators move
elsewhere.
Tags
Individual-based model
San-francisco bay
Foraging behavior
Carrying-capacity
Chesapeake bay
Crab cancer-magister
Acipenser-transmontanus
Wintering
shorebirds
Thermal substitution
White sturgeon