Spatial and Temporal Scales in Habitat Selection

Female yellow-headed blackbirds in eastern Washington State settle to nest at higher densities on marshes with higher emergence rates of odonates, the most important prey delivered to nestlings. However, settling densities of females were not correlated with odonate emergence rates on individual ter...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American naturalist 1991-06, Vol.137, p.S29-S49
Hauptverfasser: Orians, Gordon H., Wittenberger, James F.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Female yellow-headed blackbirds in eastern Washington State settle to nest at higher densities on marshes with higher emergence rates of odonates, the most important prey delivered to nestlings. However, settling densities of females were not correlated with odonate emergence rates on individual territories or on individual territories plus adjacent ones. Apparently, females assessed production of insects on breeding marshes at the time they settled, and they used this information when making settling decisions. However, they selected nest sites on the basis of vegetation density rather than food availability. The complexity of decision making by female yellowheads would not have been detected had our analysis been restricted to one spatial scale. Because interpretations of habitat selection behavior are scale-dependent, careful attention to scale and performing analyses on more than one spatial scale are essential in studies of habitat selection.
ISSN:0003-0147
1537-5323
DOI:10.1086/285138