The aim of this thesis was to investigate the effects of human disturbance on animal
foraging behaviour using oystercatchers foraging on the rocky shore as a model system.
The primary focus of this thesis was the balance between vigilance and foraging, and
the variation in this balance with changes in environmental factors and the application
of experimentally controlled human disturbance. On the structurally complex rocky
shore foraging and vigilance are generally mutually exclusive behaviours and so an
individual must trade-off energy acquisition with predator avoidance. The extent of the
trade-off was expected to vary spatially and temporally dependant upon an individual's
needs and perceived predation risk.
The foraging behaviour and prey selection of individual oystercatchers on the rocky
shore was observed from September to March when the birds were most vulnerable to
starvation. A preliminary experiment conducted in the winter of 2001-2002 used
experimental and observational methods in an attempt to identify which types of human
recreational activities had the greatest effect upon oystercatcher behaviour. In the
winter of 2002-2003 changes in oystercatcher behaviour and prey selection with
environmental factors such as the weather, temperature, wind speed, season and tidal
state; and additional factors such as individual age, and the distance to and species of
the focal oystercatcher's nearest neighbour were investigated. Oystercatcher foraging
behaviour and prey selection before, during and after human disturbance was also
observed in order to examine whether any losses to energy intake as a result of human
disturbance could be compensated for by feeding more intensively, changing prey
selection or lowering their baseline level of vigilance so that foraging time increased.
Oystercatchers did not vary in their response to disturbance dependant upon the type
of activity, but did vary spatially which could be a factor of the structural complexity of
the shore. Human disturbance significantly reduced oystercatcher foraging as their
vigilance increased, but oystercatchers returned to feeding at pre-disturbance levels
almost immediately after the disturbance had ceased. Oystercatcher success rate on the
rocky shore varied significantly with temperature and season, which may reflect an
increase in feeding effort in response to the increased energetic costs of
thermoregulation when colder temperatures ensue. Having another oystercatcher as a
nearest neighbour significantly decreased oystercatcher success rate, although the
distance separating an oystercatcher and it's nearest neighbour had no significant effect.
Wind speed did not affect oystercatcher success rate but did significantly reduce peck
rate, whilst an oystercatcher's age and the state of the tide (the amount of the shore that
was uncovered) had no significant effect on oystercatcher behaviour. Prey selection
varied with the state of the tide which could reflect prey availability. Oystercatcher
energy intake over the time for which their rocky shore prey items were uncovered by
the tide was just over half their estimated daily requirement, suggesting that feeding in
supplementary feeding areas at high tide or at night may be an important part of the
oystercatchers' foraging regime. Prey selection did not vary with disturbance, and no
compensatory mechanisms were observed. It is possible that short-term disruptions to
feeding double as digestive pauses or that there are potential constraints to energy
intake rates such as the risk of bill damage, inexperience of foraging, interference, and
prey availability
Date of Award | 2005 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Effect of human disturbance on the foraging behaviour of the oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus on the rocky shore
Carless, S. (Author). 2005
Student thesis: PhD