Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivate environmental managers to preserve and restore the critical coastal habitats on which these birds depend. Effective habitat management requires an understanding of the factors that determine habitat use and value to shorebirds, extending from individuals to the entire community. While investigating the factors that influenced shorebird foraging distributions among neighboring intertidal sand flats, we built upon species-level understandings of individual-based, small-scale foraging decisions to develop more comprehensive guild- and community-level insights. We found that densities and community composition of foraging shorebirds varied subs...
Shorebirds migrate over long distances from breeding to wintering rounds, stopping at a few bays and...
Roberts Bank within the Fraser River estuary, BC contains important migratory stopover and overwinte...
Animals must assimilate energy to survive and reproduce, but foraging conflicts with other demands o...
Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivat...
Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivat...
Virtually all species of shorebirds are decreasing on a global scale, due primarily to habitat loss ...
Many migratory shorebirds rely on estuaries as stop-over sites to refuel during migration, and the l...
Habitat loss and alteration from land use change, species invasion, and more recently, climate chang...
Shorebird populations have declined due to several threats throughout their annual cycle. Anthropoge...
P>1. Habitat selection models usually assume that the spatial distributions of animals depend pos...
Populations of many shorebird species appear to be declining in North America, and food resources at...
Habitat loss is thought to be the biggest factor contributing to the decline of shorebirds worldwide...
Shorebirds migrate over long distances from breeding to wintering grounds, stopping at a few bays an...
Shorebirds are found in marine and freshwater, and provide a variety of ecosystem functions. Our st...
Classical ecological theory predicts that generally similar species ought to partition resources in ...
Shorebirds migrate over long distances from breeding to wintering rounds, stopping at a few bays and...
Roberts Bank within the Fraser River estuary, BC contains important migratory stopover and overwinte...
Animals must assimilate energy to survive and reproduce, but foraging conflicts with other demands o...
Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivat...
Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivat...
Virtually all species of shorebirds are decreasing on a global scale, due primarily to habitat loss ...
Many migratory shorebirds rely on estuaries as stop-over sites to refuel during migration, and the l...
Habitat loss and alteration from land use change, species invasion, and more recently, climate chang...
Shorebird populations have declined due to several threats throughout their annual cycle. Anthropoge...
P>1. Habitat selection models usually assume that the spatial distributions of animals depend pos...
Populations of many shorebird species appear to be declining in North America, and food resources at...
Habitat loss is thought to be the biggest factor contributing to the decline of shorebirds worldwide...
Shorebirds migrate over long distances from breeding to wintering grounds, stopping at a few bays an...
Shorebirds are found in marine and freshwater, and provide a variety of ecosystem functions. Our st...
Classical ecological theory predicts that generally similar species ought to partition resources in ...
Shorebirds migrate over long distances from breeding to wintering rounds, stopping at a few bays and...
Roberts Bank within the Fraser River estuary, BC contains important migratory stopover and overwinte...
Animals must assimilate energy to survive and reproduce, but foraging conflicts with other demands o...