THE EFFECT OF AN EXPERIMENTALLY CREATED MUSSEL BED ON BIRD DENSITIES AND FOOD-INTAKE OF THE OYSTERCATCHER HAEMATOPUS-OSTRALEGUS

Authors
Citation
Bj. Ens et D. Alting, THE EFFECT OF AN EXPERIMENTALLY CREATED MUSSEL BED ON BIRD DENSITIES AND FOOD-INTAKE OF THE OYSTERCATCHER HAEMATOPUS-OSTRALEGUS, Ardea, 84A, 1996, pp. 493-508
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Ornithology
Journal title
ArdeaACNP
ISSN journal
03732266
Volume
84A
Year of publication
1996
Pages
493 - 508
Database
ISI
SICI code
0373-2266(1996)84A:<493:TEOAEC>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
When an experimental mussel bed was created in 1987 on the mudflats so uth of Schiermonnikoog, Herring Gulls immediately increased in numbers , consuming starfish and damaged Mussels. The build-up of oyster catch er numbers was more gradual, but persisted for longer. Most Oystercatc hers attracted to the mussel bed fed on Mussels. The proportion of Oys tercatchers that hammered Mussels was relatively high, which may have been due to the relatively thin shells of the Mussels fished from the subtidal. Intake rates on the experimental mussel bed were on average higher than those achieved by birds feeding on other prey (mainly Maco ma balthica and Nel-eis diversicolor), but the difference did not reac h statistical significance. As the feeding density on the mussel bed i ncreased, intake rates dropped, but it is not known if this relationsh ip has a causal basis. Previous suggestions that the hammering birds s ubstantially depleted the hammerable Mussels seem less likely in the l ight of our current analysis. The discussion stresses that the experim ental creation of mussel beds is a powerful technique to test in the f ield distribution models derived from ideal free theory and investigat es what lessons can be learned from the current pilot experiment that may be of use in the design elf future experiments.