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Feeding behaviour of birds foraging on predictable resources in habitats of different quality

Molokwu, Mary Ngozi ; Olsson, Ola LU orcid and Ottosson, Ulf LU (2007) In Ostrich 78(2). p.295-298
Abstract
Using the density of food left in a patch after foraging - i.e. the giving-up density (GUD) - as a behavioural indicator, short-term foraging studies on birds in the dry and wet fringing forests and savanna habitats of the Amurum Forest Reserve, Laminga, Nigeria, were used to evaluate whether widespread food abundance will affect their behaviour in these apparently-different habitats. The effect of the dry season on feeding activity and the effects of temperature within, and between, days were also investigated. Results showed that GUDs were highest in dry fringing forests, intermediate in wet fringing forests, and lowest in savanna. This difference may have been as a result of a difference in food abundance between habitats. The... (More)
Using the density of food left in a patch after foraging - i.e. the giving-up density (GUD) - as a behavioural indicator, short-term foraging studies on birds in the dry and wet fringing forests and savanna habitats of the Amurum Forest Reserve, Laminga, Nigeria, were used to evaluate whether widespread food abundance will affect their behaviour in these apparently-different habitats. The effect of the dry season on feeding activity and the effects of temperature within, and between, days were also investigated. Results showed that GUDs were highest in dry fringing forests, intermediate in wet fringing forests, and lowest in savanna. This difference may have been as a result of a difference in food abundance between habitats. The availability of water in the wet fringing forests may have affected the feeding behaviour of the birds in the wet gully habitat compared with those of the dry gully. The behaviour of birds in response to time of day was affected by temperature, as there was no difference between GUDs in open and covered habitats in the mornings at lower temperatures, but lower GUDs were recorded in cover (at higher temperatures) in the afternoon when birds may - due to thermoregulatory costs - retreat to cover more often. However, temperature had no effect on GUDs over season. A reduction in GUDs towards the end of the dry season, as food resources deplete, gives further credence to the observation that food abundance affects behaviour. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Ostrich
volume
78
issue
2
pages
295 - 298
publisher
BirdLife South Africa
external identifiers
  • wos:000248669100055
  • scopus:34547889901
ISSN
0030-6525
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3a04d0c1-be79-4aa7-b6ed-81f4d9e8f8b0 (old id 655902)
alternative location
http://www.nisc.co.za/oneAbstract?absId=2355
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:24:06
date last changed
2024-04-25 09:33:30
@article{3a04d0c1-be79-4aa7-b6ed-81f4d9e8f8b0,
  abstract     = {{Using the density of food left in a patch after foraging - i.e. the giving-up density (GUD) - as a behavioural indicator, short-term foraging studies on birds in the dry and wet fringing forests and savanna habitats of the Amurum Forest Reserve, Laminga, Nigeria, were used to evaluate whether widespread food abundance will affect their behaviour in these apparently-different habitats. The effect of the dry season on feeding activity and the effects of temperature within, and between, days were also investigated. Results showed that GUDs were highest in dry fringing forests, intermediate in wet fringing forests, and lowest in savanna. This difference may have been as a result of a difference in food abundance between habitats. The availability of water in the wet fringing forests may have affected the feeding behaviour of the birds in the wet gully habitat compared with those of the dry gully. The behaviour of birds in response to time of day was affected by temperature, as there was no difference between GUDs in open and covered habitats in the mornings at lower temperatures, but lower GUDs were recorded in cover (at higher temperatures) in the afternoon when birds may - due to thermoregulatory costs - retreat to cover more often. However, temperature had no effect on GUDs over season. A reduction in GUDs towards the end of the dry season, as food resources deplete, gives further credence to the observation that food abundance affects behaviour.}},
  author       = {{Molokwu, Mary Ngozi and Olsson, Ola and Ottosson, Ulf}},
  issn         = {{0030-6525}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{295--298}},
  publisher    = {{BirdLife South Africa}},
  series       = {{Ostrich}},
  title        = {{Feeding behaviour of birds foraging on predictable resources in habitats of different quality}},
  url          = {{http://www.nisc.co.za/oneAbstract?absId=2355}},
  volume       = {{78}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}