Literature DB >> 28306927

Effects of predatory risk and resource renewal on the timing of foraging activity in a gerbil community.

Burt P Kotler1, Yoram Ayal1, Aziz Subach2.   

Abstract

The foraging decisions of animals are often influenced by risk of predation and by the renewal of resources. For example, seed-eating gerbils on sand dunes in the Negev Desert of Israel prefer to forage in the bush microhabitat and during darker hours due to risk of predation. Also, daily renewal of seed resource patches and timing of nightly foraging activity in a depleting environment play important roles in species coexistence. We examined how these factors influence the timing of gerbil foraging by quantifying foraging activity in seed resource patches that we experimentally renewed hourly during the night. As in previous work, gerbils showed strong preference for the safe bush microhabitat and foraged less in response to high levels of illumination from natural moon light and from artificial sources. We demonstrate here for the first time that gerbils also responded to temporal and spatial heterogeneity in predatory risk through their timing of activity over the course of each night. Typically, gerbils concentrated their activity early in the night, but this changed with moon phase and in response to added illumination. These results can be understood in terms of the nature of patch exploitation by gerbils and the role played by the marginal value of energy in determining the cost of predation. They further show the dynamic nature of gerbil foraging decisions, with animals altering foraging efforts in response to time, microhabital, moon phase, illumination, and resource availability.

Keywords:  Desert rodents; Microhabitat selection; Moonlight avoidance; Optimal patch use; Timing of foraging activity

Year:  1994        PMID: 28306927     DOI: 10.1007/BF00317860

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oecologia        ISSN: 0029-8549            Impact factor:   3.225


  3 in total

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Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  1988-08       Impact factor: 3.225

3.  Seasonal variation in moonlight avoidance by bannertail kangaroo rats.

Authors:  R B Lockard; D H Owings
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  3 in total
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