Do White Pelicans Pelecanus onocrotalus benefit from foraging in flocks using synchronous feeding?
- 3 April 1995
- Vol. 137 (2) , 227-230
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1995.tb03243.x
Abstract
White Pelicans Pelecanus onocrotalus foraging at Lake Nakuru, Kenya, spent most of their time in flocks of two to several tens of individuals, and most flocks adopted a synchronized fishing behaviour. However, the maximum capture rate when feeding was attained by solitary individuals, and it decreased non‐linearly as flock size increased. Individuals in non‐synchronized flocks had a higher capture rate than those in synchronized flocks of the same size. The total number of bill probes decreased with the size of synchronized flocks, but this reduction in foraging costs did not compensate for the decrease in capture rate, since the ratio of successful probes to total probes did not increase with flock size. We discuss some hypotheses that might explain the paradoxical result that most White Pelicans aggregate into flocks and synchronize their behaviour and yet they attain a lower capture rate than those foraging alone.Keywords
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