2010
DOI: 10.1525/auk.2010.09144
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Sensitivity of Nesting Great Egrets (Ardea alba) and White Ibises (Eudocimus albus) to Reduced Prey Availability

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Cited by 40 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…This idea is afforded support by a recent 4‐year study of the diets of nestling white ibises in the northern Everglades, which were dominated by P. fallax over a wide range of foraging depths, while fish were consumed disproportionately only rarely during relatively very dry conditions (Dorn et al ., ; Boyle et al ., ). Further, this reliance on P. fallax occurred during two of the most successful ibis nesting seasons (2006 and 2009) in recent decades (Herring et al ., , ), suggesting that crayfish concentration events at the depth reported in this study can be of sufficient magnitude, both spatially and temporally, to fuel large and successful colonies of nesting wading birds. Note, however, that although the average minimum slough depths in this study were within the range exploited by invertivorous wading birds such as the white ibis, they were deeper than is considered optimal for its foraging ( c .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…This idea is afforded support by a recent 4‐year study of the diets of nestling white ibises in the northern Everglades, which were dominated by P. fallax over a wide range of foraging depths, while fish were consumed disproportionately only rarely during relatively very dry conditions (Dorn et al ., ; Boyle et al ., ). Further, this reliance on P. fallax occurred during two of the most successful ibis nesting seasons (2006 and 2009) in recent decades (Herring et al ., , ), suggesting that crayfish concentration events at the depth reported in this study can be of sufficient magnitude, both spatially and temporally, to fuel large and successful colonies of nesting wading birds. Note, however, that although the average minimum slough depths in this study were within the range exploited by invertivorous wading birds such as the white ibis, they were deeper than is considered optimal for its foraging ( c .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…In the Everglades of Florida, varying resource selection strategies across temporal scales are exemplified by several species of long-legged wading birds (White Ibis [Eudocimus albus], Great Egret [Ardea alba]; Beerens et al 2011), whose breeding populations are limited by food availability (Frederick and Spalding 1994, Ogden 2005, Herring et al 2010, and availability of prey is driven by water depth and density of prey (Gawlik 2002). In this shallow, subtropical wetland system, length of inundation over periods of months and years increases the production of the aquatic prey base (Trexler 2010), whereas dry season drying and ponding of water over periods of weeks concentrates prey and is linked to wading bird foraging density (Russell et al 2002;Fig.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3) Obstructing and supplanting nestmates. Nestlings, particularly larger ones, could potentially prevent their nestmates from eating food by supplanting or pushing them aside, as in ibises (Skead , Herring et al ) and jabiru storks Jabiru mycteria (J. Villarreal‐Orias pers. comm.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%