All Stories

  1. Moving on with foraging theory: incorporating movement decisions into the functional response of a gregarious shorebird
  2. Digestive Capacity and Toxicity Cause Mixed Diets in Red Knots That Maximize Energy Intake Rate
  3. van den Hout, P. J., van Gils, J. A., Robin, F., van der Geest, M., Dekinga, A., & Piersma, T. (2014). Interference from adults forces young red knots to forage for longer and in dangerous places. Animal Behaviour, 88, 137–146.
  4. Nutritional and reproductive strategies in a chemosymbiotic bivalve living in a tropical intertidal seagrass bed
  5. Optimizing acceleration-based ethograms: the use of variable-time versus fixed-time segmentation
  6. Personality drives physiological adjustments and is not related to survival
  7. Interference from adults forces young red knots to forage for longer and in dangerous places
  8. Seasonal changes in mollusc abundance in a tropical intertidal ecosystem, Banc d'Arguin (Mauritania): Testing the ‘depletion by shorebirds’ hypothesis
  9. The exception to the rule: retreating ice front makes Bewick's swansCygnus columbianus bewickiimigrate slower in spring than in autumn
  10. Economic design in a long-distance migrating molluscivore: how fast-fuelling red knots in Bohai Bay, China, get away with small gizzards
  11. Red Knot diet reconstruction revisited: context dependence revealed by experiments at Banc d'Arguin, Mauritania
  12. Predators in chemosynthesis-based food webs need both toxic and non-toxic prey
  13. Seagrass–Sediment Feedback: An Exploration Using a Non-recursive Structural Equation Model
  14. The Flexible Phenotype: A Body-Centred Integration of Ecology, Physiology, and Behaviour . By Theunis Piersma and Jan A. van Gils. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. $117.00 (hardcover); $52.95 (paper). ix + 238 p.; ill.; name and subject i...
  15. Small-scale demographic structure suggests preemptive behavior in a flocking shorebird
  16. A Three-Stage Symbiosis Forms the Foundation of Seagrass Ecosystems
  17. Trophic cascade induced by molluscivore predator alters pore-water biogeochemistry via competitive release of prey
  18. The Flexible Phenotype: A Body-Centred Integration of Ecology, Physiology, and Behavior .— Theunis Piersma and Jan A. van Gils . 2011 . Oxford University Press , Oxford, UK . 256 pp. ISBN 978-0-19-959724-6 . $52.95 (paperback).
  19. Designing a benthic monitoring programme with multiple conflicting objectives
  20. The Flexible Phenotype: A Body-Centred Integration of Ecology, Physiology and Behaviour.— Piersma Theunis and van Gils Jan A. . 2011. Oxford University Press, New York. 238 pp. ISBN 9780199597246. Paper, $52.95.
  21. Suitability of calcein as an in situ growth marker in burrowing bivalves
  22. Scaling up ideals to freedom: are densities of red knots across western Europe consistent with ideal free distribution?
  23. Habitat carrying capacity is reached for the European eel in a small coastal catchment: evidence and implications for managing eel stocks
  24. Why Afro-Siberian Red Knots Calidris Canutus Canutus have Stopped Staging in the Western Dutch Wadden Sea During Southward Migration
  25. State-dependent Bayesian foraging on spatially autocorrelated food distributions
  26. Biological information in an ecological context
  27. Beyond the information centre hypothesis: communal roosting for information on food, predators, travel companions and mates?
  28. The ecology of information: an overview on the ecological significance of making informed decisions
  29. Diet selection in a molluscivore shorebird across Western Europe: does it show short- or long-term intake rate-maximization?
  30. Landscape-scale experiment demonstrates that Wadden Sea intertidal flats are used to capacity by molluscivore migrant shorebirds
  31. Reversed optimality and predictive ecology: burrowing depth forecasts population change in a bivalve
  32. Longer guts and higher food quality increase energy intake in migratory swans
  33. AVIAN HERBIVORY: AN EXPERIMENT, A FIELD TEST, AND AN ALLOMETRIC COMPARISON WITH MAMMALS
  34. Short‐Term Foraging Costs and Long‐Term Fueling Rates in Central‐Place Foraging Swans Revealed by Giving‐Up Exploitation Times
  35. Hampered Foraging and Migratory Performance in Swans Infected with Low-Pathogenic Avian Influenza A Virus
  36. Digestive Organ Size and Behavior of Red Knots (Calidris Canutus) Indicate the Quality of Their Benthic Food Stocks
  37. Optimal movement between patches under incomplete information about the spatial distribution of food items
  38. Shellfish Dredging Pushes a Flexible Avian Top Predator out of a Marine Protected Area
  39. High-tide habitat choice: insights from modelling roost selection by shorebirds around a tropical bay
  40. FORAGING IN A TIDALLY STRUCTURED ENVIRONMENT BY RED KNOTS (CALIDRIS CANUTUS): IDEAL, BUT NOT FREE
  41. HIGHLY SOCIAL FORAGER
  42. Reinterpretation of gizzard sizes of red knots world-wide emphasises overriding importance of prey quality at migratory stopover sites
  43. How do red knotsCalidris canutusleave Northwest Australia in May and reach the breeding grounds in June? Predictions of stopover times, fuelling rates and prey quality in the Yellow Sea
  44. How do red knots Calidris canutus leave Northwest Australia in May and reach the breeding grounds in June? Predictions of stopover times, fuelling rates and prey quality in the Yellow Sea
  45. Digestive bottleneck affects foraging decisions in red knotsCalidris canutus. I. Prey choice
  46. Digestive bottleneck affects foraging decisions in red knotsCalidris canutus. II. Patch choice and length of working day
  47. Digestively constrained predators evade the cost of interference competition
  48. Carrying capacity models should not use fixed prey density thresholds: a plea for using more tools of behavioural ecology
  49. Do body condition and plumage during fuelling predict northwards departure dates of Great Knots Calidris tenuirostris from north-west Australia?
  50. Cost-benefit analysis of mollusc-eating in a shorebird II. Optimizing gizzard size in the face of seasonal demands
  51. Incompletely Informed Shorebirds That Face a Digestive Constraint Maximize Net Energy Gain When Exploiting Patches
  52. Holling's Functional Response Model as a Tool to Link the Food-Finding Mechanism of a Probing Shorebird with its Spatial Distribution