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Densities of Wintering Scoters in Relation to Benthic Prey Assemblages in a North Atlantic Estuary
Loring, Pamela H.1; Paton, Peter W. C.1; McWilliams, Scott R.1; McKinney, Richard A.2; Oviatt, Candace A.3
发表日期2013-06-01
ISSN1524-4695
卷号36期号:2页码:144-155
英文摘要

During winter, molluscivorous sea ducks often form high density feeding flocks in association with patchily distributed prey, although few studies have documented the substrate and prey characteristics where sea ducks (tribe: Mergini) aggregate and thus what constitutes high-value sea duck foraging habitat. Sea duck surveys were conducted and benthic grab samples collected at sites with different benthic substrate characteristics to compare macroinvertebrate community assemblages in relation to densities of three species of sea ducks: (Surf (Melanitta perspicillata), Black (M. americana), and White-winged (M. fusca) scoters (hereafter "scoters" when combined) during winter (2010-2011) in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, an urbanized estuary in the Northwest Atlantic. Overall, the highest densities of scoters (104 +/- 17 per 0.5 km(2)) were found over sand substrates with homogeneous assemblages of infaunal prey. Significantly lower densities of scoters (21 4 per 0.5 km(2)) were associated with mixed sand-gravel-mud substrates that supported epifaunal assemblages and patchily distributed infauna. Mean energy densities (kcal/g) were higher among infaunal (0.64-4.49) vs. epifaunal (0.17-0.53) prey. Overall biomass (g/m(2)) of polychaetes was higher in mixed substrates, and biomass of infaunal bivalves did not significantly differ among habitat type. However, infaunal prey may have been less accessible to scoters at sites with mixed substrates due to a barrier effect created by high-densities of epifauna with low energetic value. Thus, sand-substrate sites supporting infaunal benthic communities may provide high-quality feeding habitat for scoters wintering in the Northwest Atlantic. Understanding the influences of benthic habitat characteristics and macroinvertebrate prey assemblages on distribution of feeding scoters is particularly important for managing sea ducks in areas with increasing anthropogenic development in the coastal zone. Received 16 November 2012, accepted 13 February 2013.


英文关键词benthic community;habitat use;Melanitta;Mergini;Narragansett Bay;scoters;winter surveys
语种英语
WOS记录号WOS:000320345000003
来源期刊WATERBIRDS
来源机构美国环保署
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/59672
作者单位1.Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Nat Resources Sci, Kingston, RI 02881 USA;
2.US EPA, Atlantic Ecol Div, Narragansett, RI 02882 USA;
3.Univ Rhode Isl, Grad Sch Oceanog, Narragansett, RI 02882 USA
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Loring, Pamela H.,Paton, Peter W. C.,McWilliams, Scott R.,et al. Densities of Wintering Scoters in Relation to Benthic Prey Assemblages in a North Atlantic Estuary[J]. 美国环保署,2013,36(2):144-155.
APA Loring, Pamela H.,Paton, Peter W. C.,McWilliams, Scott R.,McKinney, Richard A.,&Oviatt, Candace A..(2013).Densities of Wintering Scoters in Relation to Benthic Prey Assemblages in a North Atlantic Estuary.WATERBIRDS,36(2),144-155.
MLA Loring, Pamela H.,et al."Densities of Wintering Scoters in Relation to Benthic Prey Assemblages in a North Atlantic Estuary".WATERBIRDS 36.2(2013):144-155.
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