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首页> 外文期刊>Ecological Modelling >Modelling small-scale foraging habitat use in breeding Eurasian oystercatchers (Haematopus ostralegus) in relation to prey distribution and environmental predictors
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Modelling small-scale foraging habitat use in breeding Eurasian oystercatchers (Haematopus ostralegus) in relation to prey distribution and environmental predictors

机译:模拟与捕食者分布和环境预测因素有关的欧亚蛎cat(Haematopus ostralegus)繁殖中小型觅食生境的利用

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摘要

Detailed knowledge of species distributions at a fine spatial scale is an essential prerequisite for the understanding of ecosystems. However, relating species distributions to environmental variables is difficult, and distribution patterns of mobile benthic top predators can only be estimated at a rough spatial scale using visual cues. This is particularly problematic in systems with strong environmental gradients, such as intertidal habitats. Monitoring predators using GPS tags allows collecting precise spatial data over wide areas and during night time. We collected fine-scale data on prey abundance and quality, sediment composition, inundation time of tidal flats, and foraging distances from nest sites to develop a predictive distribution model for oystercatchers (Haematopus ostralegus) in the Wadden Sea, Germany. This shorebird species was able to identify the patches with high biomass and abundance of its endobenthic prey at a very fine spatial scale. Modelling suggested that prey abundance and biomass were essential for predicting oystercatcher occurrence: the probability of encountering a foraging oystercatcher was higher than expected in areas with >100 cockles per m(2) and areas with 80 g ash-free dry weight per m(2). Our modelling approach also showed that habitat use by oystercatchers was very strongly dependent on abiotic factors, i.e., oystercatchers preferred muddy and low-lying tidal flats with short exposure times close to their breeding sites. Oystercatchers only used patches >4 km away from their breeding territories if such patches were particularly prey-rich. This study demonstrates the importance of fine-scale models of predators and environmental predictors in patchy environments. These results have two conclusions with important management implications: (1) fine-scale models of distribution data for predators can provide a valuable indicator of the location of important sites worthy of protection; and (2) abiotic predictors alone are suitable to identify potential valuable feeding sites for oystercatchers without the need for time-consuming collection of prey-base data, even in a coastal zone with strong gradients. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
机译:在精细的空间尺度上详细了解物种分布是了解生态系统的基本前提。然而,将物种分布与环境变量联系起来是困难的,并且只能使用视觉线索来估计可移动底栖捕食者的分布模式。在诸如潮间带栖息地等具有强烈环境梯度的系统中,这尤其成问题。使用GPS标签监控捕食者可以在大范围内和夜间收集精确的空间数据。我们收集了有关捕捞物的丰度和质量,沉积物成分,潮滩的淹没时间以及巢穴觅食距离的精细数据,以开发德国瓦登海牡蛎捕捞者的预测分布模型(Haematopus ostralegus)。这种shore鸟能够在非常精细的空间尺度上识别具有高生物量和丰富的底栖猎物的斑块。模型表明猎物的丰度和生物量对于预测捕牡蛎的发生至关重要:在每m> 2鸟蛤(2)和每平方米无灰干重80 g的地区遇到觅食牡蛎的可能性高于预期)。我们的建模方法还表明,牡蛎捕捞者对栖息地的利用在很大程度上取决于非生物因素,即牡蛎捕捞者更喜欢泥泞且地势低的滩涂,且暴露时间短且靠近其繁殖地。如果牡蛎捕猎者的猎物特别丰富,他们只会在距繁殖区域> 4 km的地方使用补丁。这项研究证明了斑驳环境中捕食者和环境预测器的精细模型的重要性。这些结果有两个结论,对管理具有重要意义:(1)捕食者的精细分布数据模型可以为重要保护区的位置提供有价值的指示; (2)仅是非生物预测因子,即使在梯度很强的沿海地区,也无需耗时的猎物数据收集就可以为牡蛎捕捞者确定潜在的有价值的觅食地点。 (C)2015 Elsevier B.V.保留所有权利。

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