Abstract

Feeding territories of Golden—winged Sunbirds contain enough energy to support an individual's daily energy requirements, and the amount of nectar per flower inside a territory tends to average higher than in adjacent undefended flowers. When undefended nectar levels are low (especially below 2 @ml per flower) the costs of territorial defense can easily be offset by energy saved from shortened foraging time budgets made possible by feeding at the higher average nectar levels. At higher undefended nectar levels the costs of territorial defense should no be recoverable. The balance between these costs and gains appears to define the conditions when territorial defense in this species is advantageous.

Keywords

TerritorialityNectarForagingEcologyBiologyOffset (computer science)

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Publication Info

Year
1975
Type
article
Volume
56
Issue
2
Pages
333-345
Citations
531
Access
Closed

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Frank B. Gill, Larry L. Wolf (1975). Economics of Feeding Territoriality in the Golden‐Winged Sunbird. Ecology , 56 (2) , 333-345. https://doi.org/10.2307/1934964

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/1934964