P>1. Studies of diet choice usually assume maximization of energy intake. The well-known 'contingency model' (CM) additionally assumes that foraging animals only spend time searching or handling prey. Despite considerable empirical support, there are many foraging contexts in which the CM fails, but such cases were considered exceptions rather than the rule. 2. For animals constrained by the rate at which food is digested, CM does not necessarily lead to maximal energy intake rates because the time for digestion is not part of the selection criteria. In the main model developed to explain diet choice under a digestive constraint, the 'digestive rate model' (DRM), time lost to digestive breaks is minimized so that energy intake over total ti...
Aiming to interpret functionally the large variation in gizzard masses of red knots Calidris canutus...
1. Whether food intake is determined by the maximum rate at which animals can collect food, or by th...
Among energy-maximizing animals, preferences for different prey can be explained by ranking the prey...
P>1. Studies of diet choice usually assume maximization of energy intake. The well-known 'conting...
1. Studies of diet choice usually assume maximization of energy intake. The well-known ‘contingency ...
Rate-maximising foragers that only divide their time between searching and handling prey should, acc...
Summary 1. Rate-maximizing foragers that only divide their time between searching and handling prey ...
Foragers that feed on hidden prey are uncertain about the intake rate they can achieve as they enter...
Foragers that feed on hidden prey are uncertain about the intake rate they can achieve as they enter...
1. When prey occur at high densities, energy assimilation rates are generally constrained by rates o...
1. Rate-maximizing foragers that only divide their time between searching and handling prey should, ...
In energy-maximizing animals, preferences for different prey can be explained by ranking them by the...
Digestive capacity often limits food intake rate in animals. Many species can flexibly adjust digest...
Behavioural variation within a species is usually explained as the consequence of individual variati...
Aiming to interpret functionally the large variation in gizzard masses of red knots Calidris canutus...
Aiming to interpret functionally the large variation in gizzard masses of red knots Calidris canutus...
1. Whether food intake is determined by the maximum rate at which animals can collect food, or by th...
Among energy-maximizing animals, preferences for different prey can be explained by ranking the prey...
P>1. Studies of diet choice usually assume maximization of energy intake. The well-known 'conting...
1. Studies of diet choice usually assume maximization of energy intake. The well-known ‘contingency ...
Rate-maximising foragers that only divide their time between searching and handling prey should, acc...
Summary 1. Rate-maximizing foragers that only divide their time between searching and handling prey ...
Foragers that feed on hidden prey are uncertain about the intake rate they can achieve as they enter...
Foragers that feed on hidden prey are uncertain about the intake rate they can achieve as they enter...
1. When prey occur at high densities, energy assimilation rates are generally constrained by rates o...
1. Rate-maximizing foragers that only divide their time between searching and handling prey should, ...
In energy-maximizing animals, preferences for different prey can be explained by ranking them by the...
Digestive capacity often limits food intake rate in animals. Many species can flexibly adjust digest...
Behavioural variation within a species is usually explained as the consequence of individual variati...
Aiming to interpret functionally the large variation in gizzard masses of red knots Calidris canutus...
Aiming to interpret functionally the large variation in gizzard masses of red knots Calidris canutus...
1. Whether food intake is determined by the maximum rate at which animals can collect food, or by th...
Among energy-maximizing animals, preferences for different prey can be explained by ranking the prey...