滨鸟(翼形目)进食大型无脊椎动物的摄取率和功能反应。

John D Goss-Custard, Andrew D West, Michael G Yates, Richard W G Caldow, Richard A Stillman, Louise Bardsley, Juan Castilla, Macarena Castro, Volker Dierschke, Sarah E A Le V Dit Durell, Goetz Eichhorn, Bruno J Ens, Klaus-Michael Exo, P U Udayangani-Fernando, Peter N Ferns, Philip A R Hockey, Jennifer A Gill, Ian Johnstone, Bozena Kalejta-Summers, Jose A Masero, Francisco Moreira, Rajarathina Velu Nagarajan, Ian P F Owens, Cristian Pacheco, Alejandro Perez-Hurtado, Danny Rogers, Gregor Scheiffarth, Humphrey Sitters, William J Sutherland, Patrick Triplet, Dave H Worrall, Yuri Zharikov, Leo Zwarts, Richard A Pettifor
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于野外测定需要大量的工作,因此能够容易地预测描述自由生活捕食者的功能反应的系数,以及与环境中食物生物体丰度有关的食物摄取率的函数将是有用的。作为一种容易参数化基于个体的滨鸟(Charadriiformes)种群模型的方法,我们尝试将其用于捕食大型无脊椎动物的滨鸟。采食量以每秒钟主动觅食的无灰干质量(AFDM)来衡量;也就是说,不包括花在消化暂停和其他活动上的时间,比如梳理毛发。目前和以前的研究表明,在整个猎物密度范围内,捕食大致相同大小的猎物的滨鸟的功能反应的一般形状是减速上升到平台,从而近似于Holling II型(“圆盘方程”)公式。但实地研究证实,渐近线并不是由处理时间决定的,正如圆盘方程所假设的那样,因为只有大约一半的觅食时间用于成功或不成功地攻击和处理猎物,其余的时间用于搜索。对30种功能反应的回顾表明,自由生活的滨鸟的摄取率在很大范围内与猎物密度无关,在猎物密度非常低的情况下达到渐近线(
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Intake rates and the functional response in shorebirds (Charadriiformes) eating macro-invertebrates.

As field determinations take much effort, it would be useful to be able to predict easily the coefficients describing the functional response of free-living predators, the function relating food intake rate to the abundance of food organisms in the environment. As a means easily to parameterise an individual-based model of shorebird Charadriiformes populations, we attempted this for shorebirds eating macro-invertebrates. Intake rate is measured as the ash-free dry mass (AFDM) per second of active foraging; i.e. excluding time spent on digestive pauses and other activities, such as preening. The present and previous studies show that the general shape of the functional response in shorebirds eating approximately the same size of prey across the full range of prey density is a decelerating rise to a plateau, thus approximating the Holling type II ('disc equation') formulation. But field studies confirmed that the asymptote was not set by handling time, as assumed by the disc equation, because only about half the foraging time was spent in successfully or unsuccessfully attacking and handling prey, the rest being devoted to searching.A review of 30 functional responses showed that intake rate in free-living shorebirds varied independently of prey density over a wide range, with the asymptote being reached at very low prey densities (<150/m-2). Accordingly, most of the many studies of shorebird intake rate have probably been conducted at or near the asymptote of the functional response, suggesting that equations that predict intake rate should also predict the asymptote.A multivariate analysis of 468 'spot' estimates of intake rates from 26 shorebirds identified ten variables, representing prey and shorebird characteristics, that accounted for 81% of the variance in logarithm-transformed intake rate. But four-variables accounted for almost as much (77.3%), these being bird size, prey size, whether the bird was an oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus eating mussels Mytilus edulis, or breeding. The four variable equation under-predicted, on average, the observed 30 estimates of the asymptote by 11.6%, but this discrepancy was reduced to 0.2% when two suspect estimates from one early study in the 1960s were removed. The equation therefore predicted the observed asymptote very successfully in 93% of cases. We conclude that the asymptote can be reliably predicted from just four easily measured variables. Indeed, if the birds are not breeding and are not oystercatchers eating mussels, reliable predictions can be obtained using just two variables, bird and prey sizes. A multivariate analysis of 23 estimates of the half-asymptote constant suggested they were smaller when prey were small but greater when the birds were large, especially in oystercatchers. The resulting equation could be used to predict the half-asymptote constant, but its predictive power has yet to be tested. As well as predicting the asymptote of the functional response, the equations will enable research workers engaged in many areas of shorebird ecology and behaviour to estimate intake rate without the need for conventional time-consuming field studies, including species for which it has not yet proved possible to measure intake rate in the field.

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