info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Mudflat Use and Predation on Male Southwestern Atlantic Fiddler Crabs (Uca uruguayensis) by Gull-billed Terns (Gelochelidon nilotica)
Fecha
2018-03-01Registro en:
Ribeiro, Pablo Damián; Navarro, Diego; Jaureguy, Luciano M.; Iribarne, Oscar Osvaldo; Mudflat Use and Predation on Male Southwestern Atlantic Fiddler Crabs (Uca uruguayensis) by Gull-billed Terns (Gelochelidon nilotica); Waterbird Society; Waterbirds; 41; 1; 1-3-2018; 68-72
1524-4695
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Ribeiro, Pablo Damián
Navarro, Diego
Jaureguy, Luciano M.
Iribarne, Oscar Osvaldo
Resumen
Gull-billed Terns (Gelochelidon nilotica) comprise a group of cosmopolitan subspecies that make use of a wide range of aquatic ecosystems and have a broad dietary spectrum. This study documents the use of a southwestern Atlantic mudflat in Argentina and depredation of the southwestern Atlantic fiddler crab (Uca uruguayensis) by Gull-billed Terns. Gull-billed Terns preyed exclusively on male fiddler crabs. This may have been due to the observed presence of Gull-billed Terns mainly between 2 and 3 hr after low tide, when more than 80% of fiddler crabs active on the surface were males. Gull-billed Terns spent 66.9% of the time flying over and feeding on fiddler crabs. Gull-billed Terns landed without feeding 9.3% of the time. Gull-billed Terns succeeded in capturing prey in 29.8% of cases. Food capture rate of Gull-billed Terns was 68.9 items/hr, which is higher than rates reported for the species feeding on fiddler crabs in Mauritania and Guinea Bissau.