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    Behavioral Consequences of Habitat Selection in the Herring Gull

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    Pierotti_1987.pdf (604.1Kb)
    Issue Date
    1987
    Author
    Pierotti, Raymond
    Publisher
    University of New Mexico Press
    Type
    Article
    Article Version
    Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
    Published Version
    https://sora.unm.edu/node/139235
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    Abstract
    Data were collected on time budgets, rates of chick provisioning, and patterns of aggressive behavior in Herring Gulls Larus argentatus that nested in three distinct habitats on Great Island, Newfoundland. Exposed marine terraces (rocky habitat) had the highest nest density, and territories were subject to high levels of intrusion by prospecting conspecifics. This resulted in high levels of aggressive interaction, yet these birds had high breeding success. In contrast, gulls nesting in meadows suffered a high rate of predation on eggs and young. This predation pressure forced male birds to remain on their territories to defend their nests, which resulted in high rates of neighbor-neighbor aggressive interaction, and a reduced rate of chick provisioning by males. The third habitat, grass-hummock covered maritime slopes (puffin habitat) had low nest density and little or no predation pressure. This resulted in low levels of aggressive interaction and reduced vigilance with no apparent decline in offspring production. The results of this study demonstrate how habitat choice can have behavioral consequences that contribute to variation in offspring production within a species.
    URI
    https://hdl.handle.net/1808/34693
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    • Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Scholarly Works [1555]
    Citation
    Pierotti, R. 1987b. Behavioral consequences of habitat selection in the herring gull. in Studies in Avian Biology 10:119 128. https://sora.unm.edu/node/139235.

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    Contact KU ScholarWorks
    785-864-8983
    KU Libraries
    1425 Jayhawk Blvd
    Lawrence, KS 66045
    785-864-8983

    KU Libraries
    1425 Jayhawk Blvd
    Lawrence, KS 66045
    Image Credits
     

     

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