Summary
The behaviour of five adult wheatears (Oe. oenanthe) delivering prey (maggots and mealworms) from artificial patches to the nestlings was studied. The existence of a so-called loading effect was confirmed. Handling times for subsequent prey items increased with the number held in the beak, which led to a decrease in collecting rates with patch time and, in most cases, to positively accelerating loading functions when collecting times for prey items are plotted as a function of load size. All birds seemed to become more efficient at loading prey in the experimental patches during the course of the nestling period. Loading functions for maggots and mealworms were slightly different. When forcing the birds to visit several cups (only one item in each cup) and remove a layer of moss before reaching the prey (low-density patches), all birds took fewer prey and two of them stayed longer in them than in highdensity patches (one cup filled with prey items). This was due to an increase in search times with the number of prey held in the beak.
From knowledge of the loading functions and travel times to the nest, it is possible to predict the optimal load sizes according to a mathematical solution of the delivery rate model of Orians and Pearson (1979). By transforming collecting and travel times to energy expenditures, it is also possible to derive predictions from an energy efficiency model (maximizing energy delivery per unit energy expended in a round-trip). The observed average load sizes did not differ significantly from those predicted by the delivery rate model, but they were significantly smaller in all cases than those predicted by the energy efficiency model. For birds feeding nestlings, it may be more important to sacrifice efficiency in energy expenditure in favour of greater delivery rates, thereby maximizing the growth rate of the young.
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Carlson, A., Moreno, J. The loading effect in central place foraging wheatears (Oenanthe oenanthe L.). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 11, 173–183 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00300060
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00300060