1999
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2656.1999.00289.x
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Food availability and the nocturnal vs. diurnal foraging trade‐off in juvenile salmon

Abstract: 1. Much attention has been devoted to explaining the spatial distribution of foraging animals, but rather little to their temporal distribution (i.e. whether they are diurnal, nocturnal or crepuscular). Many animals face predictable diel cycles of food availability or predation risk, and so the approach of measuring the relative ratio of mortality risk to food gained (the ‘minimize μ/f’ rule) can be applied equally as well to different time periods of the day as to alternative food patches or habitats. 2. Thi… Show more

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Cited by 240 publications
(302 citation statements)
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References 73 publications
(83 reference statements)
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“…Species that can be either nocturnal or diurnal can be used to test whether diel activity patterns respond to variations in predation pressure (Metcalfe et al 1999). Many fishes can change their activity pattern from nocturnal to diurnal and vice versa, usually on a seasonal basis (Sanchez-Vazquez et al 1996, Yokota & Oishi 1992.…”
Section: Temporal Shifts Of Predators and Their Preymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Species that can be either nocturnal or diurnal can be used to test whether diel activity patterns respond to variations in predation pressure (Metcalfe et al 1999). Many fishes can change their activity pattern from nocturnal to diurnal and vice versa, usually on a seasonal basis (Sanchez-Vazquez et al 1996, Yokota & Oishi 1992.…”
Section: Temporal Shifts Of Predators and Their Preymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As temperatures drop they increasingly seek refuge during the day in crevices and emerge at night (Metcalfe et al 1999). Higher temperatures imply greater energetic requirements, hence the diurnal activity at higher temperatures and more temperate zones.…”
Section: Temporal Shifts Of Predators and Their Preymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Daytime predation risk from diurnally endothermic predators (birds and mammals) has been suggested as the major factor governing diurnal concealment (VALDIMARSSON and METCALFE, 1998;METCALFE et al, 1999). It also reduces downstream displacement and physical injury during freshets or ice formation (BUSTARD and NARVER, 1975;TSCHAPLINSKI and HARTMAN, 1983).…”
Section: Winteringmentioning
confidence: 99%