Predator-prey size relationships in North American dabbling ducks

1984 
Diets of dabbling ducks (Anas: Anatidae) usually have been recorded only with respect to taxonomic composition and not prey size. Interspecific diet overlap thus has been termed large. However, using published taxonomic diet lists for seven species of ducks, measurements of bill morphology from museum specimens, and "handbook" data on the sizes and caloric density of invertebrates, prey size distributions were found to differ among species (P < 0.001). Also, the sizes of prey in each species' diet differed from that found in the environment. The number of lamellae per centimetre of bill negatively correlated with mean prey size (P < 0.001); body size and bill length did not. Based on the similarity of environmental and dietary prey size distributions, species were classified as specialist or generalist foragers. This classification corresponded well with one generated from analyses of foraging behaviour alone. An explanation for the diminuitive sizes of ducks on islands was advanced: if interspecific comp...
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