birding-aus

VS: waterbird associations

To: "birding-aus" <>
Subject: VS: waterbird associations
From: "Wim Vader" <>
Date: Wed, 28 Jun 2006 10:42:57 +0200
As just now there is a lot of talk on the list of waterbirds associating with 
each other, and often using other species as 'beaters', it may be of some 
interest to repeat a little piece that I wrote some five years ago, about an 
association I watched 25 years ago, in Bodega Bay, California.

                                                                                
        Wim Vader
                        BUFFLEHEADS SAVE PHALAROPES

In 1979-80 I spent a sabbatical year at the Bodega Marine Station in Bodega 
Bay, California. The shallow Bodega Harbor is a wonderfully rich bird area, and 
I used much of my spare time watching all the loons, grebes, pelicans, ducks 
and shorebirds. Among my favourite ducks were the cheerful and active 
Buffleheads Bucephala albeola, feeding by diving to the bottom in tight flocks 
in certain areas of the harbor, where the bottom clearly was covered with large 
amounts of green Ulva-type algae, full of small crustaceans, probably what the 
ducks fed on in the first place.
These flocks were intermittently active, but also used a lot of time lazing, 
displaying and preening. Feeding activity seems to be contagious, as usually 
either all the Buffleheads in a flock were actively diving and feeding, or none 
of them were. (As an amphipod specialist I did identify the most common 
Crustacea in the green algae there, but I suppose the names will not tell you 
much, so I omit them).
In November 1979 there was a sizeable wreck of phalaropes, and for a few weeks 
we found weak or dead phalaropes everywhere in the area, even on our own porch 
in the sand dunes. Soon, however, a very interesting pattern appeared, in that 
the surviving phalaropes clearly used the feeding Bufflehead flocks as food 
source. I collected a series of data (never published), that showed that as 
soon as a Bufflehead flock started diving and feeding, phalaropes arrived from 
near and far and associated with the ducks. What happened was that the ducks 
dove up the clumps of green algae, and ate them at the surface. Meanwhile a 
number of the small crustaceans in the algal clumps escaped, and these clearly 
formed the main attraction for the phalaropes.
As soon as the Bufflehead-flock stopped diving and feeding, the phalaropes 
drifted away, only to return as soon as the Buffleheads became active again. 
For several weeks this feeding association continued, until in fact the only 
place where one still found phalaropes , was together with the Bufflehead 
flocks. Then gradually the phalaropes disappeared: died or flew away. I did not 
find fresh corpses after the first week of the wreck.

There were of course many other diving birds on Bodega Harbor in this period, 
but the phalaropes did not show any attraction to any of them. Apparently, the 
tight flocks of Buffleheads, diving all at the same time, and bringing up 
clumps of green algae full of delicious small Crustacea, were just the right 
environment for the hungry and weakened phalaropes.
Has anyone else noted this type of feeding association?

                                                Wim Vader, Tromsø Museum
                                                9037 Tromsø, Norway
                                                

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