Quantifying the effects of habitat structure on prey detectability and accessibility to farmland birds
Open Access
- 16 November 2004
- Vol. 146 (s2) , 123-130
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.2004.00352.x
Abstract
For species that rely on visual cues to detect prey items, increasing the structural complexity of a patch can greatly influence forager behaviour through consequent reductions in prey detectability and accessibility. These effects are likely to manifest themselves in terms of foraging site selection and there is plentiful evidence for preferential site selection for a suite of taxa. However, the underlying effects of habitat structure on foraging behaviour, which are likely to drive these observed site selections, are much less well understood. We present the results of two studies designed to quantify the effects of vegetation structure on prey detectability and accessibility to avian invertebrate feeders and granivores on farmland. There was a significant negative relationship between potential prey detectability and both distance and vegetation height in cereal crops and stubbles for Northern Lapwings Vanellus vanellus. The interscan distance travelled by Lapwings differed significantly between habitats, with longer distances travelled in cereal crops and harrowed compared with ploughed soil and grasses. The peck rate, head‐up rate and mean search period of foraging Chaffinches Fringilla coelebs were not affected by increasing vegetation structure but forager mobility was significantly reduced. We hope that by quantifying the effects of vegetation structure on prey detectability and accessibility we can highlight the importance of considering these factors, as well as prey abundance, when developing management strategies for farmland birds.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Farmland biodiversity: is habitat heterogeneity the key?Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 2003
- The influence of substrate on the functional response of an avian granivore and its implications for farmland bird conservationOecologia, 2002
- Factors determining winter densities of birds on Environmentally Sensitive Area arable reversion grassland in southern England, with special reference to skylarks (Alauda arvensis)Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 1998
- Design of grassland feeding areas for waders during winter: The relative importance of sward, landscape factors and human disturbanceBiological Conservation, 1998
- Post-dispersal predation on Pinus sylvestris seeds by Fringilla spp: ground substrate affects selection for seed colorOecologia, 1997
- Metabolic Aspects of Shivering Thermogenesis in Passerines during WinterOrnis Scandinavica, 1992
- Random Prey Detection with Pause-Travel SearchThe American Naturalist, 1991
- Protective Cover and the Use of Space: Different Strategies in FinchesOikos, 1990
- Comparative winter feeding ecology of LapwingsVanellus vanellusand Golden PloversPluvialis apricariaon cereals and grasslands in the Lower Derwent Valley, North YorkshireBird Study, 1987
- Prey Detectability for Fish-Eating Birds in Relation to Fish Density and Water TransparencyOrnis Scandinavica, 1985