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Annual variation in foraging ecology of prothonotary warblers during the breeding season

January 1, 1990

We studied foraging ecology of Prothonotary Warblers (Protonotaria citrea) along the Tennessee River in west-central Tennessee during the breeding seasons of 1984-1987. We analyzed seven foraging variables to determine if this population exhibited annual variation in foraging behavior. Based on nearly 3,000 foraging maneuvers, most variables showed significant interyear variation during the four prenestling and three nestling periods we studied. This interyear variation probably was due -to proximate, environmental cues--such as distribution and abundance of arthropods - which, in turn, were influenced by local weather conditions. Researchers should consider the consequences of combining foraging behavior data collected in different years, because resolution of ecological trends may be sacrificed by considering only general patterns of foraging ecology and not the dynamics of those activities. In addition, because of annual variability, foraging data collected in only one year, regardless of the number of observations gathered, may not provide an accurate concept of the foraging ecology in insectivorous birds.

Publication Year 1990
Title Annual variation in foraging ecology of prothonotary warblers during the breeding season
Authors L. J. Petit, D. R. Petit, K.E. Petit, W. J. Fleming
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title The Auk
Index ID 5222706
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center