首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Size differences in migrant sandpiper flocks: ghosts in ephemeral guilds
Authors:Jan L Eldridge  Douglas H Johnson
Institution:(1) Department of Ecology and Behavioral Biology, Bell Museum of Natural History, University of Minnesota, 10 Church Street S.E., 55455 Minneapolis, MN, USA;(2) Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center, U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 2096, 58402 Jamestown, ND, USA;(3) Present address: Minnesota Valley NWR, 4101 E, 80th Street, 55425 Bloomington, MN, USA
Abstract:Summary Scolopacid sandpipers were studied from 1980 until 1984 during spring migration in North Dakota. Common species foraging together in mixed-species flocks differed in bill length most often by 20 to 30 percent (ratios from 1.2:1 to 1.3:1). Observed flocks were compared to computer generated flocks drawn from three source pools of Arctic-nesting sandpipers. The source pools included 51 migrant species from a global pool, 33 migrant species from a Western Hemisphere pool, and 13 species that migrated though North Dakota. The observed flocks formed randomly from the available species that used the North Dakota migration corridor but the North Dakota species were not a random selection from the Western Hemisphere and global pools of Arctic-nesting scolopacid sandpipers. In short, the ephemeral, mixed-species foraging flocks that we observed in North Dakota were random mixes from a nonrandom pool. The size-ratio distributions were consistent with the interpretation that use of this migration corridor by sandpipers has been influenced by some form of sizerelated selection such as competition.
Keywords:Size ratio  Shorebirds  Migration  Null models  Competition
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号