In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year. To cope with such seasonality, animals may be phenotypically flexible, but some phenotypic traits are fixed. If fixed phenotypic traits are functionally linked to resource use, then animals should redistribute in response to seasonally changing resources, leading to a ‘phenotype-limited’ distribution. Here, we examine this possibility for a shorebird, the bar-tailed godwit (Limosa lapponica; a long-billed and sexually dimorphic shorebird), that has to reach buried prey with a probing bill of fixed length. The main prey of female bar-tailed godwits is buried deeper in winter than in summer. Using sightings of individually marked females, we f...
Bar-tailed Godwits (Limosa lapponica baueri) are a hugely size-variable shorebird exhibiting reverse...
Metawad is a five-year research project funded by Waddenfonds that started in 2011. One of its aims ...
Under the ideal-free distribution, omniscient individuals with similar habitat requirements that are...
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) implies correlated differences in energetic requirements and feeding op...
The inverse relationship between body size and environmental temperature is a widespread ecogeograph...
International audienceHabitat selection is an important process in birds that influences individual ...
The inverse relationship between body size and environmental temperature is a widespread ecogeograph...
Predicting how changes in the environment will impact migratory populations requires an understandin...
The inverse relationship between body size and environmental temperature is a widespread ecogeograph...
Among scolopacid shorebirds, Bar-tailed Godwits (Limosa lapponica) have unusually high intra- and in...
Bar-tailed Godwits (Limosa lapponica baueri) are a hugely size-variable shorebird exhibiting reverse...
Metawad is a five-year research project funded by Waddenfonds that started in 2011. One of its aims ...
Under the ideal-free distribution, omniscient individuals with similar habitat requirements that are...
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
In our seasonal world, animals face a variety of environmental conditions in the course of the year....
Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) implies correlated differences in energetic requirements and feeding op...
The inverse relationship between body size and environmental temperature is a widespread ecogeograph...
International audienceHabitat selection is an important process in birds that influences individual ...
The inverse relationship between body size and environmental temperature is a widespread ecogeograph...
Predicting how changes in the environment will impact migratory populations requires an understandin...
The inverse relationship between body size and environmental temperature is a widespread ecogeograph...
Among scolopacid shorebirds, Bar-tailed Godwits (Limosa lapponica) have unusually high intra- and in...
Bar-tailed Godwits (Limosa lapponica baueri) are a hugely size-variable shorebird exhibiting reverse...
Metawad is a five-year research project funded by Waddenfonds that started in 2011. One of its aims ...
Under the ideal-free distribution, omniscient individuals with similar habitat requirements that are...