Publication | Closed Access
Optimal Meal Size in Hummingbirds
139
Citations
21
References
1978
Year
Breeding BehaviorNutritionBehavioral SciencesBody CompositionForagingFitnessAnimal NutritionAvian LocomotionEvolutionary BiologyOptimal Meal SizeOptimization TheoryEducationAvian EvolutionOptimality ModelPublic HealthAnimal BehaviorOptimality CriteriaBehavioral Economics
Optimization theory is applied to hummingbird foraging to explain the observation that birds in the laboratory with access to functionally unlimited food supplies usually do not take as large a meal as they could. Foraging bouts are modeled in terms of time and energy; birds are constrained by the increased energetic costs associated with the added weight of their meal. Predictions of optimal meal size which maximize the rate of net energy gain or which maximize efficiency agree closely with laboratory and limited field data; we presently are unable to discriminate between these two optimality criteria. Predictions which assume optimal use of time or which maximize net energy gain or which neglect weight of the meal all proved unsatisfactory, generally by predicting optimal meal sizes in excess of capacity. Sensitivity analysis revealed that model predictions may be much influenced by parameter values potentially under physiological and/or behavioral control by a hummingbird. While we presently do not understand what governs the values of these parameters, we suggest that this control will eventually prove explicable by an optimality model of bird behavior.
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