Data from: Moving on with foraging theory: incorporating movement decisions into the functional response of a gregarious shorebird
1. Models relating intake rate to food abundance and competitor densities (generalized functional response models) can predict forager distributions and movements between patches, but we lack understanding of how distributions and small-scale movements by the foragers themselves affect intake rates....
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Models relating intake rate to food abundance and competitor densities
(generalized functional response models) can predict forager distributions
and movements between patches, but we lack understanding of how
distributions and small-scale movements by the foragers themselves affect
intake rates. 2. Using a state-of-the-art approach based on
continuous-time Markov chain dynamics, we add realism to classic
functional response models by acknowledging that the chances to encounter
food and competitors are influenced by movement decisions, and, vice
versa, that movement decisions are influenced by these encounters. 3. We
used a multi-state modelling framework to construct a stochastic
functional response model in which foragers alternate between three
behavioural states: searching, handling and moving. 4. Using behavioural
observations on a molluscivore migrant shorebird (red knot, Calidris
canutus canutus), at its main wintering area (Banc d'Arguin,
Mauritania), we estimated transition rates between foraging states as a
function of conspecific densities and densities of the two main bivalve
prey. 5. Intake rate decreased with conspecific density. This interference
effect was not due to decreased searching efficiency, but resulted from
time lost to avoidance movements. 6. Red knots showed a strong functional
response to one prey (Dosinia isocardia), but a weak response to the other
prey (Loripes lucinalis). This corroborates predictions from a recently
developed optimal diet model that accounts for the mildly toxic effects
due to consuming Loripes. 7. Using model-averaging across the most
plausible multi-state models, the fully parameterized functional response
model was then used to predict intake rate for an independent dataset on
habitat choice by red knot. 8. Comparison of the sites selected by red
knots with random sampling sites showed that the birds fed at sites with
higher than average Loripes and Dosinia densities, i.e. sites for which we
predicted higher than average intake rates. 9. We discuss the limitations
of Holling's classical functional response model that ignores
movement and the limitations of contemporary movement ecological theory
ignoring consumer-resource interactions. With the rapid advancement of
technologies to track movements of individual foragers at fine spatial
scales, the time seems ripe to integrate descriptive tracking studies with
stochastic movement-based functional response models. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.m9j80 |