Food dispersion and foraging energetics: A mechanistic synthesis for field studies of avian benthivores
Authored by MP Gillingham, JR Lovvorn
Date Published: 1996
DOI: 10.2307/2265620
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Much effort has focused on modeling and measuring the energy costs of
free existence and the foraging strategies of animals. However, few
studies have quantitatively linked these approaches to the patch
structure of foods in the field. We developed an individual-based model
that relates field measurements of the dispersion of benthic foods to
search costs and foraging profitability of diving ducks.
On Lake Mattamuskeet, North Carolina, Canvasback ducks (Aythya
valisineria) eat only the belowground winter buds of the submerged plant
Vallisneria americana. We measured and modeled the patch structure of
winter buds at the level of potential foraging `'loci,'' defined as
contiguous circles 1 m in diameter. In the field and in the model, Canvasbacks make repeated vertical dives in such loci, foraging in the
sediments by touch, before surface-swimming to another locus. We
quantified first-order patchiness by fitting a negative bi nomial
distribution to core samples taken at 50-m intervals along transects, to
yield the frequencies of loci with different bud densities. Second-order
patchiness was measured by taking cores at 1-m increments radiating from
each sampling point, and regressing bud density at each sampling point
on densities at these increments. No significant correlations were
found, indicating that Canvasbacks could not predict food densities
based on densities in nearby foraging loci. For the model, we generated
food grids from the negative binomial distributions of core samples.
Energy costs of diving were calculated by applying aerobic efficiencies
(mechanical power output divided by aerobic power input) to
biomechanical models. Unlike respirometry alone, this method accounts
for effects on dive costs of varying water depth and dive duration. We
used measurements of Canvasback intake rates at different bud densities
to calculate profitability (energy intake minus expenditure) for each
dive. Multivariate uncertainty analyses (Latin hypercube) indicated that
profitability for Canvasbacks foraging on Vallisneria buds is determined
mainly by food-item size and locomotor costs of descent. Bud
metabolizable energy, water temperature, bud dispersion, and search and
handling time coefficients of the functional response for intake rate
have relatively minor influence. Individual-parameter perturbations
indicated that to maintain the same foraging benefits, the total area of
Vallisneria habitat would have to increase by 1.4-fold if dry mass per
bud decreased from 0.10 to 0.03 g, and by 2.1-fold if water depth
increased from 0.5 to 2 m.
Our method allows study of interactions between patch structure and
foraging energetics without detailed spatial mapping of foods, which is
not feasible at appropriate scales for highly mobile benthivores. The
model yields estimates of energy balance, contaminant intake, and amount
and quality of foraging habitat required to sustain diving duck
populations under varying environmental conditions. More accurate
prediction of giving-up times and giving-up food densities will require
better understanding of the time scale over which ducks balance their
energy budgets.
Tags
Individual-based model
Simulation-model
Somateria-mollissima
Aythya-fuligula
Size selection
Computer-models
Common eiders
Ruddy ducks
Metabolic rates
Patch depletion