Abstract
The use of feeding habitat by eastern curlews in Moreton Bay was examined by means of
quantitative density assessment at 26 sites from 13 locations. The sites were chosen to encompass
variation in width (area) of tidal flat, seagrass density, and substratum type. Each site was visited
four times: during each of a neap and a spring low tide, in January and February 1992. The
total curlew count per site was strongly positively correlated with the width of the tidal flat, and
had little or no relationship with seagrass density, substratum type or tidal phase. Wide flats also
showed more variation than narrow flats in total curlew numbers. Curlew density, measured by
the number of birds within 100 m of each side of the water's edge, was also greater on wide
tidal flats, showed little relationship to seagrass density or substratum type, but was higher during
neap low tides than spring lows. The data suggest that curlews choose soft-sediment intertidal
feeding sites on the basis of potential foraging area, and may be particularly sensitive to the
lower and infra-littoral areas. A better understanding of foraging site selection by the eastern
curlew requires information on site fidelity, feeding success in relation to tidal zonation, diet and
the influence of social interactions.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
11 articles.
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