Search results for "Foraging site"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Egalitarian mixed-species bird groups enhance winter survival of subordinate group members but only in high-quality forests

2020

AbstractOnly dominant individuals have unrestricted access to contested resources in group-living animals. In birds, subordinates with restricted access to resources may respond to intragroup contests by acquiring extra body reserves to avoid periods of food shortage. In turn, higher body mass reduces agility and increases predation and mortality risk to subordinates. Birds often live in hierarchically organized mixed-species groups, in which heterospecific individuals are considered to substitute for conspecifics as protection against predators at a significantly reduced competition cost. Crested tits (Lophophanes cristatus) and willow tits (Poecile montanus) form mixed-species groups duri…

0106 biological sciencesMaleWillowBehavioural ecologyZoologylcsh:Medicine010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArticlePredationSongbirdsWillow titmedicineDominance (ecology)Animalslcsh:ScienceForaging sites ; mixed-species groups ; social complexity ; predation riskSocial evolutionMultidisciplinarybiologyAggressionlcsh:RInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation Physiological010601 ecologyDominance hierarchySocial DominancePoecilelcsh:QFemaleSeasonsmedicine.symptom
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Modeling sequential production: the migratory beekeeper case

2018

This paper formalizes a bio-economic model of migratory beekeeping activities, during the annual production cycle, so as to discern the optimal sequence of foraging sites for migratory beekeepers; it then proceeds to empirically verify the model via a case study. The model assumes that the apiary farm produces three marketable outputs under conditions of certainty with disjunctive resources at the sites. In particular, honey, commercial pollination services and nucleus colonies are produced sequentially at foraging sites throughout the year. The model determines a migratory beekeeper’s revenues, variable costs, gross income from each sequence of foraging sites under the constraint that th…

Strategy and Management1409 Tourism Leisure and Hospitality ManagementSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Bio-economic modelManagement Information SystemSettore AGR/01 - Economia Ed Estimo RuraleBio-economic model Foraging sitesPrice responseBio-economic model Foraging sites Migratory beekeeper Price response Sequential productionSequential productionForaging siteBusiness and International ManagementMigratory beekeeper
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Spatial Memory Drives Foraging Strategies of Wolves, but in Highly Individual Ways

2022

The ability of wild animals to navigate and survive in complex and dynamic environments depends on their ability to store relevant information and place it in a spatial context. Despite the centrality of spatial memory, and given our increasing ability to observe animal movements in the wild, it is perhaps surprising how difficult it is to demonstrate spatial memory empirically. We present a cognitive analysis of movements of several wolves (Canis lupus) in Finland during a summer period of intensive hunting and den-centered pup-rearing. We tracked several wolves in the field by visiting nearly all GPS locations outside the den, allowing us to identify the species, location and timing of ne…

central place foragingANIMAL MOVEMENTPREYsusieläinten käyttäytyminenHOME-RANGECOLLARED WOLVESdiscrete choice modelingWORKING-MEMORYwolfRESOURCE SELECTIONSPACEPOPULATIONEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsforaging site switchingmuisti (kognitio)reviiritEcologyCANIS-LUPUSsaalistusforaging site fidelityDISCRETE-CHOICE MODELSboundary patrolling1181 Ecology evolutionary biologypredationmovement
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