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Epsilon Dissertations and Graduate Theses Archive

Habitat selection

:

demography and individual decisions

Arlt, Debora (2007) Habitat selection. Doctoral diss. Dept. of Ecology, SLU. Acta Universitatis agriculturae Sueciae vol. 2007:17.

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Abstract

Habitat selection is the behavioural process determining the distribution of individuals among habitats varying in quality, thus affecting individual fitness and population growth. Models of population dynamics often assume that individuals have perfect knowledge about habitat qualities and settle accordingly in the best habitats available. Many studies of dispersal have focused on the movements of individuals away from a site, but knowledge on settlement decisions is still scarce.

I investigated settlement and departure decisions in a long-distant migrant, the northern wheatear (Oenanthe oenanthe), breeding in a heterogeneous agricultural landscape. First, I investigated the settlement of wheatears choosing a new territory at the time of territory establishment in spring. I show that territory selection is non-ideal as wheatears did not prefer territories with characteristics most closely predicting individual fitness. Second, I studied the territory selection of experienced breeders which may use many potential cues as they have been breeding in the same area before. The results show that information gathering of experienced breeders is constrained, and that they cannot always settle at a preferred site probably because of the earlier establishment by other individuals. Third, I show that such a priority constraint in territory site selection may be a proximate cause for female-biased dispersal in wheatears and possibly in many other bird species. Fourth, as a first step to link habitat selection behaviour and population dynamics, I investigated habitat-specific population growth.

Overall, I show that constraints acting on individual habitat selection result in a greater proportion of individuals breeding in poorer habitats than would be expected from ideal selection, which has consequences for population persistence.

Faculty:Faculty of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences
Keywords:

dispersal, ecological trap, farmland birds, habitat quality, Oenanthe oenanthe, population dynamics, post-breeding movements, preference, settlement, site fidelity

Agrovoc terms:

passeriformes, farmland, habitats, quality, animal migration, behaviour, population dynamics, population distribution

ISBN:978-91-576-7316-9
Series.:Acta Universitatis agriculturae Sueciae
ISSN:1652-6880
Volume:2007:17
Papers/manuscripts:

Arlt, D. & Pärt, T. 2007. Nonideal breeding habitat selection: a mismatch between preference and fitness. Ecology, in press.

Arlt, D. & Pärt, T. The timing of habitat selection: a study of post-breeding movements and breeding territory shifts. (Manuscript).

Arlt, D. & Pärt, T. Sex-biased dispersal: males constrain female site selection. (Manuscript).

Arlt, D., Forslund, P., Jeppsson, T. & Pärt, T. Habitat-specific population growth of a farmland bird. (Manuscript).

Number of pages:30
Year of publication:2007
Language:eng
ID Code:1362
Deposited By:Arlt, Debora
Deposited On:13 March 2007

Last updated: 2006-03-03

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