Human-Imprinted Northern Bobwhite Chicks and Indexing Arthropod Foods in Habitat Patches

Arthropods are an important diet resource for northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) chicks. Estimates of arthropod abundance using standard entomological sampling techniques may lack biological relevance for assessing potential foraging value of habitat patches because they do not incorporate a re...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of wildlife management 2001-10, Vol.65 (4), p.861-870
Hauptverfasser: Palmer, William E., Lane, M. Walter, Bromley, Peter T.
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container_title The Journal of wildlife management
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creator Palmer, William E.
Lane, M. Walter
Bromley, Peter T.
description Arthropods are an important diet resource for northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) chicks. Estimates of arthropod abundance using standard entomological sampling techniques may lack biological relevance for assessing potential foraging value of habitat patches because they do not incorporate a realistic availability measure of arthropods to bobwhite chicks. Assuming that human-imprinted (hereafter, imprinted) bobwhite chicks foraged similarly to wild bobwhite chicks, we estimated foraging rates (arthropods [g] consumed/30 min/chick) and mass (g) changes of imprinted chicks foraging in different habitat patches, and used these measures to index arthropod abundance. Ranks of arthropod abundance in soybean fields (n = 8) based on foraging rates of imprinted chicks were different from ranks based on arthropod counts from sweepnet sampling. Ranks of arthropod abundance in soybean fields (n = 10) based on mass changes of imprinted chicks were different from ranks based on dry mass (g) of arthropods collected by sweepnetting and pitfall trapping. However, ranks of habitat patches based on foraging rates and mass changes of imprinted chicks were similar. Estimated sample sizes for comparing chick foraging rates of 2 agricultural habitats, with power (1 - β) = 0.8 and α = 0.05, were reasonable (n ≤ 11) at observed levels of sampling error. Foraging rates of imprinted chicks in randomly selected, conventionally tilled soybean and corn fields were low (range 0.09-0.12 g/30 min/chick), but foraging rates were 2.1 and 3.8 times greater along field edges and in no-tilled fields, respectively. Our results suggest that using estimates of arthropod abundance to rank the foraging value of habitats may be unreliable without information on availability of arthropods to chicks. Indices of the foraging value of habitat patches based on imprinted bobwhite chicks were more biologically relevant than arthropod abundance information.
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Walter ; Bromley, Peter T.</creator><creatorcontrib>Palmer, William E. ; Lane, M. Walter ; Bromley, Peter T.</creatorcontrib><description>Arthropods are an important diet resource for northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) chicks. Estimates of arthropod abundance using standard entomological sampling techniques may lack biological relevance for assessing potential foraging value of habitat patches because they do not incorporate a realistic availability measure of arthropods to bobwhite chicks. Assuming that human-imprinted (hereafter, imprinted) bobwhite chicks foraged similarly to wild bobwhite chicks, we estimated foraging rates (arthropods [g] consumed/30 min/chick) and mass (g) changes of imprinted chicks foraging in different habitat patches, and used these measures to index arthropod abundance. Ranks of arthropod abundance in soybean fields (n = 8) based on foraging rates of imprinted chicks were different from ranks based on arthropod counts from sweepnet sampling. Ranks of arthropod abundance in soybean fields (n = 10) based on mass changes of imprinted chicks were different from ranks based on dry mass (g) of arthropods collected by sweepnetting and pitfall trapping. However, ranks of habitat patches based on foraging rates and mass changes of imprinted chicks were similar. Estimated sample sizes for comparing chick foraging rates of 2 agricultural habitats, with power (1 - β) = 0.8 and α = 0.05, were reasonable (n ≤ 11) at observed levels of sampling error. Foraging rates of imprinted chicks in randomly selected, conventionally tilled soybean and corn fields were low (range 0.09-0.12 g/30 min/chick), but foraging rates were 2.1 and 3.8 times greater along field edges and in no-tilled fields, respectively. Our results suggest that using estimates of arthropod abundance to rank the foraging value of habitats may be unreliable without information on availability of arthropods to chicks. 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Walter</au><au>Bromley, Peter T.</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Human-Imprinted Northern Bobwhite Chicks and Indexing Arthropod Foods in Habitat Patches</atitle><jtitle>The Journal of wildlife management</jtitle><date>2001-10-01</date><risdate>2001</risdate><volume>65</volume><issue>4</issue><spage>861</spage><epage>870</epage><pages>861-870</pages><issn>0022-541X</issn><eissn>1937-2817</eissn><coden>JWMAA9</coden><abstract>Arthropods are an important diet resource for northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) chicks. Estimates of arthropod abundance using standard entomological sampling techniques may lack biological relevance for assessing potential foraging value of habitat patches because they do not incorporate a realistic availability measure of arthropods to bobwhite chicks. 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ispartof The Journal of wildlife management, 2001-10, Vol.65 (4), p.861-870
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language eng
recordid cdi_proquest_miscellaneous_18226148
source JSTOR
subjects Agriculture
Animal and plant ecology
Animal behavior
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Animals
Arthropods
Autoecology
Aves
Biological and medical sciences
Birds
Bobwhites
Chicks
Colinus virginianus
Crops
Food
Foraging
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Habitats
Insects
Quails
Soybeans
Sustainable agriculture
Vertebrata
Wildlife habitats
title Human-Imprinted Northern Bobwhite Chicks and Indexing Arthropod Foods in Habitat Patches
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