Preference in patchy landscapes: the influence of scale-specific intake rates and variance in reward
Author(s) -
Kate R. Searle,
N. Thompson Hobbs,
Bruce A. Wunder,
Lisa A. Shipley
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
behavioral ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.162
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1465-7279
pISSN - 1045-2249
DOI - 10.1093/beheco/arj030
Subject(s) - foraging , biology , ecology , predictability , herbivore , scale (ratio) , food intake , preference , feeding behavior , variance (accounting) , variation (astronomy) , spatial ecology , maximization , behavioral ecology , optimal foraging theory , statistics , zoology , mathematics , geography , psychology , social psychology , economics , cartography , physics , accounting , endocrinology , astrophysics
Understanding the responses of foragers to patchy distributions of resources has formed a fundamental challenge in behavioral ecology. Two currencies have been used to assess the patch preferences of herbivores--intake rate maximization and risk sensitivity. We wished to understand if small mammalian foragers, collared lemmings (Dichrostonyx groenlandicus), choose patches to maximize food intake rate or to reduce risk of starvation in "variable" environments. Moreover, we examined the possibility that maximizing intake rate depends on the spatial scale of patchiness. We designed an experiment offering two alternative patches of food, varying the predictability of food rewards and the "potential intake rate" at different spatial scales. Collared lemmings did not consistently select patches that maximized their intake rate at either scale studied. Instead, they chose patches offering the least variation in food reward over the course of the experiment. Collared lemmings used prior knowledge gained from previous foraging bouts to assess food variability. We interpret these results as evidence for risk-averse foraging strategies, which are predicted for continuous foragers aiming to minimize risk of starvation. Copyright 2006.collared lemmings; maximization of intake rate; patch selection; risk-sensitive foraging
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