Nocturnally constrained foraging of a lotic minnow (Rhinichthys cataractae)

1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (8) ◽  
pp. 2008-2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Culp

Diel periodicity in foraging activity of the longnose dace (Rhinichthys cataractae) was determined by measuring dace activity over the stream bed, gut fullness, and the digestive state of prey items. Although most species of minnows are either diurnally or crepuscularly active, dace began foraging within 1 h after sunset with light levels near 10 lx and ceased before sunrise throughout the ice-free period. During the day few prey were taken as the dace remained under the shelter of stones. This nocturnal foraging pattern did not appear to be affected by spawning or seasonal changes in prey composition. Nocturnal foraging in dace is not likely a response to prey availability, but may be a response to avoid diel periods when salmonid competitors or visual predators are active.

The Condor ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tasso C Cocoves ◽  
Mark I Cook ◽  
Jeffrey L Kline ◽  
Lori Oberhofer ◽  
Nathan J Dorn

Abstract As avian reproductive success is generally prey limited, identifying important prey types or sizes and understanding mechanisms governing prey availability are important objectives for avian conservation ecology. Irruptive White Ibis (Eudocimus albus) nesting at coastal colonies in the southern Everglades numbered over 100,000 nests in the 1930s. A century of drainage and altered hydrologic patterns reduced aquatic prey availability and eliminated large nesting events; nesting activity in recent decades has been typically less than 5% of historical peaks. Hydrologic restoration is expected to increase ibis nesting activity, but which prey types will support high nesting effort is less clear. In 2017 and 2018, we collected food boluses from White Ibis chicks at coastal colonies in Everglades National Park. We also monitored regional nesting activity from 1999 to 2018. In 2017, the region had 1,075 nests, typical of the past several decades; but in 2018, there were 30,420 nests, representing the highest recorded nesting activity in 87 yr. Prey composition varied between years; estuarine crabs dominated nestling boluses in 2017, while crayfish and fish were dominant prey in 2018. Crayfish, especially Procambarus alleni, were heavily exploited by ibis early in the 2018 breeding season, while fish were used more at the end. Crayfish abundances in wetlands near the colonies were higher prior to 2018, and more crayfish-producing short-hydroperiod wetlands remained available for ibis foraging in 2018. Our results support previous studies indicating that crayfish are important prey for breeding ibises and suggest that unprecedented, extensive flooding of seasonal wetlands promoted crayfish production and initiated the irruptive breeding in 2018. Our observations indicate that rehydration of the southern Everglades could restore ibis nesting activity at coastal colonies, but further investigations of hydrologic variation, crayfish production, and ibis foraging and nesting activity will be helpful to understand these dynamics and the importance of short-hydroperiod wetlands.


1979 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 79 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Miller

The food and feeding habits of two species of cormorant were studied on a group of freshwater lakes in inland New South Wales. P. sulcirostris fed mainly on exotic fish (69% of live weight of prey), captured while fishing communally in the deeper waters. P. melanoleucos fed mainly on native decapod crustaceans (60% of prey) captured while fishing individually in the shallow parts of the lakes, and in nearby billabongs and farm dams. P. sulcirostris took larger common carp Carassius auratus, redfin Perca fluviatilis and yabby Cherax destructor than its congener. Seasonal changes in the diet of P. sulcirostris were similar in each year; its major prey, common carp and redfin, were least available during winter and spring, as fry grew too large to be captured and swallowed. Changes in diet of P. melanoleucos were irregular, as the availability of yabby, its major prey, was influenced by the turbidity, level and temperature of water. Seasonal changes in diets of both cormorants were attributed to changes in prey availability, and not changes in food preference. Food of nestlings sometimes differed from that of adults.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-41
Author(s):  
Duong Thi Thuy Le ◽  
Jodi J.L. Rowley ◽  
Dao Thi Anh Tran ◽  
Huy Duc Hoang

Abstract While deforestation is one of the greatest drivers of biodiversity loss, our understanding of the effects of habitat modification on species is limited. We investigated the diet of a forest-dwelling frog species, Morafka’s frog (Odorrana morafkai), in a highland forest in Vietnam in relation to habitat disturbance, sex and season. We surveyed the species at 45 sites in forest of varying disturbance and examined its diet using stomach flushing, estimating prey availability via trapping. We detected significantly fewer O. morafkai in highly disturbed habitats compared to moderately disturbed or non-disturbed habitats. We revealed that O. morafkai is a dietary generalist, identifying 28 prey types, primarily invertebrates. Prey composition, the number of prey items per stomach and prey volume per stomach did not vary between disturbance levels. Diet did not vary significantly between sexes, except that females had a higher prey volume. Prey composition in the species varied between seasons, with Coleoptera and Orthoptera dominating the diet in the rainy season and Lepidoptera in the dry season. The number of prey items per stomach and prey volume were significantly higher in the rainy season. There was a significant correlation between prey availability and diet composition. The low number of O. morafkai detected in highly disturbed habitats suggests that this habitat may not be optimal for the species, despite having a generalist feeding strategy and presumed high mobility. This study provides a window into the impact of an increasing threat, habitat disturbance, on forest-dependent amphibian species.


2007 ◽  
Vol 85 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Arzel ◽  
J. Elmberg ◽  
M. Guillemain

Time–activity budgets in the family Anatidae are available for the wintering and breeding periods. We present the first flyway-level study of foraging time in a long-distance migrant, the Eurasian Green-winged Teal, Anas crecca crecca L., 1758 (“Teal”). Behavioral data from early and late spring staging, breeding, and molting sites were collected with standardized protocols to explore differences between the sexes, seasons, and diel patterns. Teal foraging activity was compared with that of the Mallard, Anas platyrhynchos L., 1758 and Northern Shoveler, Anas clypeata L., 1758, and the potential effects of duck density and predator-caused disturbance were explored. In early spring, foraging time was moderate (50.5%) and mostly nocturnal (45%). It increased dramatically in all three species at migration stopovers and during molt, mostly because of increased diurnal foraging, while nocturnal foraging remained fairly constant along the flyway. These patterns adhere to the “income breeding” strategy expected for this species. No differences between the sexes were recorded in either species studied. Teal foraging time was positively correlated with density of Teal and all ducks present, but negatively correlated with predator disturbance. Our study suggests that Teal, in addition to being income breeders, may also be considered as income migrants; they find the energy necessary to migrate at staging sites along the flyway.


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (7) ◽  
pp. 1487-1491 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Leonard ◽  
M. B. Fenton

The purpose of this study was to collect data on the foraging and roosting behaviour of Euderma maculatum in the Okanagan Valley of southern British Columbia. The work was performed in the summer of 1981. Bats concentrated their foraging activity in open areas adjacent to ponderosa pine. None of the over 1000 attempted captures of prey we witnessed involved E. maculatum gleaning insects from ground or foliage, and we question the idea that big-eared bats are gleaners. Some attacks on flying insects involve steep dives to the ground, presumably in response to the defensive behaviour of prey. Spotted bats foraged alone, avoiding one another apparently by listening to the echolocation calls of conspecifics. Intrusion by one bat into the feeding area of another resulted in an altercation which stopped when one bat left the area. Heavy rain may have inhibited foraging flights, but there was no evidence that other meteorological factors or moonlight significantly inhibited foraging activity. The bats roosted alone in steep cliff faces and two radio-tagged individuals returned consistently to the same cliff face to roost. Departure was presumably influenced by light levels, as bats departed earlier on cloudy nights than on bright ones.


1997 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 263 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. Barratt

Studies of predation by house cats in Australia have not attempted to compare the composition of prey taken by cats with the relative availability of prey. Information on the composition of vertebrate prey caught by house cats in Canberra was collected by recording prey deposited at cat owners’ residences over 12 months. A total of 1961 prey representing 67 species were collected or reported. In all, 64% of prey were introduced mammals, especially mice and rats, with birds comprising 27% (14% native, 10% introduced, 3% unidentified), reptiles 7%, amphibians 1% and native mammals 1%. Predatory behaviour by house cats appeared largely opportunistic with respect to spatial (habitat) and temporal (daily and seasonal) prey availability and accessibility, although there is mounting evidence from this and other studies that small mammals are the preferred prey. While this means that introduced mice and rats are common prey of house cats in urban and suburban environments, it also suggests that in relatively undisturbed environments adjoining new residential developments, predation by house cats may have a substantial impact on locally abundant, patchily distributed populations of native fauna, particularly mammals. Imposing night-time curfews on cats is likely to lessen predation of mammals but will probably not greatly reduce predation of birds or reptiles.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodolfo Liporoni ◽  
Guaraci Duran Cordeiro ◽  
Paulo Inácio Prado ◽  
Clemens Schlindwein ◽  
Eric James Warrant ◽  
...  

Abstract The foraging activity of diurnal bees often relies on flower availability, light intensity and temperature. We do not know how nocturnal bees, which fly at night and twilight, cope with these factors, especially as light levels vary considerably from night to day and from night to night due to moon phase and cloud cover. Given that bee apposition compound eyes function at their limits in dim light, we expect a strong dependence of foraging activity on light intensity in nocturnal bees. Besides being limited by minimum light levels to forage, nocturnal bees should also avoid foraging at brighter intensities, which bring increased competition with other bees. We investigated how five factors (light intensity, flower availability, temperature, humidity, and wind) affect flower visitation by Neotropical nocturnal bees in cambuci (Campomanesia phaea, Myrtaceae). We counted visits per minute over 30 nights in 33 cambuci trees. Light intensity was the main variable explaining flower visitation of nocturnal bees, which peaked at intermediate light levels occurring 25 min before sunrise. The minimum light intensity threshold to visit flowers was 0.00024 cd/m2. Our results highlight the dependence of these nocturnal insects on adequate light levels to explore resources.


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