Data from: Effects of age and reproductive status on individual foraging site fidelity in a long-lived marine predator
Individual foraging specializations, where individuals use a small component of the population niche width, are widespread in nature with important ecological and evolutionary implications. In long-lived animals, foraging ability develops with age, but we know little about the ontogeny of individual...
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Zusammenfassung: | Individual foraging specializations, where individuals use a small
component of the population niche width, are widespread in nature with
important ecological and evolutionary implications. In long-lived animals,
foraging ability develops with age, but we know little about the ontogeny
of individuality in foraging. Here we use precision global positioning
system (GPS) loggers to examine how individual foraging site fidelity
(IFSF), a common component of foraging specialization, varies between
breeders, failed breeders and immatures in a long-lived marine
predator—the northern gannet Morus bassanus. Breeders (aged 5+) showed
strong IFSF: they had similar routes and were faithful to distal points
during successive trips. However, centrally placed immatures (aged 2–3)
were far more exploratory and lacked route or foraging site fidelity.
Failed breeders were intermediate: some with strong fidelity, others being
more exploratory. Individual foraging specializations were previously
thought to arise as a function of heritable phenotypic differences or via
social transmission. Our results instead suggest a third alternative—in
long-lived species foraging sites are learned during exploratory
behaviours early in life, which become canalized with age and experience,
and refined where possible—the exploration-refinement foraging hypothesis.
We speculate similar patterns may be present in other long-lived species
and moreover that long periods of immaturity may be a consequence of such
memory-based individual foraging strategies. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.8m1nf |