4.2 Article

Foraging location quality as a predictor of fidelity to a diurnal site for adult female American woodcock Scolopax minor

Journal

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 379-388

Publisher

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.2981/09-100

Keywords

American woodcock; fidelity; foraging; habitat quality; movement; Scolopax minor

Funding

  1. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  2. U.S. Geological Survey (Science Support Initiative and the Minnesota Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit)
  3. Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
  4. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources
  5. Michigan Department of Natural Resources

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Quality of recently used foraging areas is likely an important predictor of fidelity to specific locations in the future. We monitored movement and habitat use of 58 adult female American woodcock Scolopax minor at three study areas in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan, USA, during autumn 2002 and 2003, to assess the relationship between foraging habitat use decisions and environmental conditions at previously used foraging locations. We assessed whether habitat variables which related to food and weather were related to distance between locations on subsequent days of individual woodcock that choose diurnal foraging locations when they return from night-time roosting locations. We predicted that woodcock would return to foraging locations used on the previous day (i.e. shorter distances between daily foraging locations) when environmental conditions on the prior day were favourable. Woodcock generally made short (i.e. 48% < 50 m and 91% < 400 m) between-day movements, but also occasionally similar to 7%) abandoned prior foraging areas. The primary determinants of woodcock movements during autumn (prior to migration) were low local food availability and potential for increased food availability elsewhere. The quality of foraging locations was an important predictor of future foraging habitat use for woodcock, consistent with the hypothesis that woodcock movement behaviour balances the risks associated with movement with the potential benefits of increased energy intake in new foraging areas.

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