Food availability is a fundamental determinant of habitat selection in animals, including shorebirds foraging on benthic invertebrates. However, the combination of dynamic habitats, patchy distributions at multiple spatial scales, and highly variable densities over time can make prey less predictable on ocean- exposed sandy shores. This can, hypothetically, cause a mismatch between prey and consumer distributions in these high-energy environments. Here we test this prediction by examining the occurrence of actively foraging pied oyster-catchers (Haematopus longirostris) in relation to physical habitat attributes and macrobenthic prey assemblages on a 34-km long, high-energy beach in Eastern Australia. We incorporate two spatial dimensions: ...
Feeding specialisation is a common cause of individual variation. Fitness payoffs of specialisation ...
Spatial relationships between predators and prey have important implications for landscape processes...
<div><p>Many attempts to relate animal foraging patterns to landscape heterogeneity are focused on t...
Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivat...
P>1. Habitat selection models usually assume that the spatial distributions of animals depend pos...
Foraging distributions are thought to be density-dependent, because animals not only select for a hi...
<div><p>Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation,...
Animals must assimilate energy to survive and reproduce, but foraging conflicts with other demands o...
Understanding links between habitat characteristics and foraging efficiency help to predict how envi...
Understanding links between habitat characteristics and foraging efficiency help to predict how envi...
Foraging distributions are thought to be density‐dependent, because animals not only select for a hi...
International audienceHabitat selection is an important process in birds that influences individual ...
Spatial relationships between predators and prey have important implications for landscape processes...
Feeding specialisation is a common cause of individual variation. Fitness payoffs of specialisation ...
Spatial relationships between predators and prey have important implications for landscape processes...
<div><p>Many attempts to relate animal foraging patterns to landscape heterogeneity are focused on t...
Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation, motivat...
P>1. Habitat selection models usually assume that the spatial distributions of animals depend pos...
Foraging distributions are thought to be density-dependent, because animals not only select for a hi...
<div><p>Worldwide declines in shorebird populations, driven largely by habitat loss and degradation,...
Animals must assimilate energy to survive and reproduce, but foraging conflicts with other demands o...
Understanding links between habitat characteristics and foraging efficiency help to predict how envi...
Understanding links between habitat characteristics and foraging efficiency help to predict how envi...
Foraging distributions are thought to be density‐dependent, because animals not only select for a hi...
International audienceHabitat selection is an important process in birds that influences individual ...
Spatial relationships between predators and prey have important implications for landscape processes...
Feeding specialisation is a common cause of individual variation. Fitness payoffs of specialisation ...
Spatial relationships between predators and prey have important implications for landscape processes...
<div><p>Many attempts to relate animal foraging patterns to landscape heterogeneity are focused on t...