Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats

Typescript (photocopy). Habitat factors, feeding ecology, and physiological body condition of northern shovelers (Anas clypeata) were studied on saline wetlands of the Texas Gulf Coast, and on several freshwater lakes 18 km inland. The hypothesis considered was that freshwater and saltwater habitats...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tietje, William Dean
Other Authors: Teer, James G., Weller, Milton W., Silvy, Nova J., Smeins, Fred E.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Texas A&M University. Libraries 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188
id fttexasamuniv:oai:oaktrust.library.tamu.edu:1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188
record_format openpolar
spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:oaktrust.library.tamu.edu:1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188 2023-07-16T03:51:43+02:00 Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats Tietje, William Dean Teer, James G. Weller, Milton W. Silvy, Nova J. Smeins, Fred E. 1986 xiii, 94 leaves electronic application/pdf reformatted digital https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188 eng eng Texas A&M University. Libraries https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188 17930402 This thesis was part of a retrospective digitization project authorized by the Texas A&M University Libraries. Copyright remains vested with the author(s). It is the user's responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holder(s) for re-use of the work beyond the provision of Fair Use. http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Major wildlife and fisheries sciences 1986 Dissertation T564 Ducks Wintering Texas Coastal Bend Region Anas clypeata Habitat Feeding and feeds Thesis dissertations text 1986 fttexasamuniv 2023-06-27T22:17:04Z Typescript (photocopy). Habitat factors, feeding ecology, and physiological body condition of northern shovelers (Anas clypeata) were studied on saline wetlands of the Texas Gulf Coast, and on several freshwater lakes 18 km inland. The hypothesis considered was that freshwater and saltwater habitats do not provide equal resources for wintering shovelers and that this difference would be reflected in body condition. Aquatic vegetation persisted through winter 1982-84 in freshwater wetlands, but died out of most saltwater ponds by late December both years. Plankton biomass averaged 4x greater in freshwater than saltwater habitat during winter 1982-83, but little difference occurred the next year. Nekton and seed biomass averaged 33% and 4x greater, respectively, in freshwater habitat during 1982-84. Shovelers fed about equal time on freshwater and saltwater habitats. Plankton comprised about 33% of the diet in both habitats, but shovelers that inhabited freshwater consumed proportionately more plant foods than their saltwater counterparts, which presumably substituted a low-quality diet of Foraminifera. Gut morphology data indicated clearly that diet quality was better among shovelers that foraged on freshwater wetlands. However, the caloric density of the diet was about equal on freshwater and saltwater habitats in 1982-83 and greater on saltwater the next winter, due largely to consumption of cold-stunned fish during a 2-week period in December 1983. Plankton was the most preferred shoveler food on both wetland types. Average body and omental-fat weights of shovelers of all age-sex classes were larger at freshwater than saltwater sites in 29 of 40 between-habitat comparisons; a notable exception to that trend occurred during the record cold weather of 1983-84. Average body, omental-fat, and sternal-muscle weights were larger at saltwater sites, apparently due to consumption of fish. In contrast, during the unusually cold weather, condition declined in freshwater habitat, presumably because of the lack of fish ... Thesis Anas clypeata Shoveler Texas A&M University Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language English
topic Major wildlife and fisheries sciences
1986 Dissertation T564
Ducks
Wintering
Texas
Coastal Bend Region
Anas clypeata
Habitat
Feeding and feeds
spellingShingle Major wildlife and fisheries sciences
1986 Dissertation T564
Ducks
Wintering
Texas
Coastal Bend Region
Anas clypeata
Habitat
Feeding and feeds
Tietje, William Dean
Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
topic_facet Major wildlife and fisheries sciences
1986 Dissertation T564
Ducks
Wintering
Texas
Coastal Bend Region
Anas clypeata
Habitat
Feeding and feeds
description Typescript (photocopy). Habitat factors, feeding ecology, and physiological body condition of northern shovelers (Anas clypeata) were studied on saline wetlands of the Texas Gulf Coast, and on several freshwater lakes 18 km inland. The hypothesis considered was that freshwater and saltwater habitats do not provide equal resources for wintering shovelers and that this difference would be reflected in body condition. Aquatic vegetation persisted through winter 1982-84 in freshwater wetlands, but died out of most saltwater ponds by late December both years. Plankton biomass averaged 4x greater in freshwater than saltwater habitat during winter 1982-83, but little difference occurred the next year. Nekton and seed biomass averaged 33% and 4x greater, respectively, in freshwater habitat during 1982-84. Shovelers fed about equal time on freshwater and saltwater habitats. Plankton comprised about 33% of the diet in both habitats, but shovelers that inhabited freshwater consumed proportionately more plant foods than their saltwater counterparts, which presumably substituted a low-quality diet of Foraminifera. Gut morphology data indicated clearly that diet quality was better among shovelers that foraged on freshwater wetlands. However, the caloric density of the diet was about equal on freshwater and saltwater habitats in 1982-83 and greater on saltwater the next winter, due largely to consumption of cold-stunned fish during a 2-week period in December 1983. Plankton was the most preferred shoveler food on both wetland types. Average body and omental-fat weights of shovelers of all age-sex classes were larger at freshwater than saltwater sites in 29 of 40 between-habitat comparisons; a notable exception to that trend occurred during the record cold weather of 1983-84. Average body, omental-fat, and sternal-muscle weights were larger at saltwater sites, apparently due to consumption of fish. In contrast, during the unusually cold weather, condition declined in freshwater habitat, presumably because of the lack of fish ...
author2 Teer, James G.
Weller, Milton W.
Silvy, Nova J.
Smeins, Fred E.
format Thesis
author Tietje, William Dean
author_facet Tietje, William Dean
author_sort Tietje, William Dean
title Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
title_short Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
title_full Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
title_fullStr Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
title_sort aspects of the wintering ecology of northern shovelers on freshwater and saline habitats
publisher Texas A&M University. Libraries
publishDate 1986
url https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188
genre Anas clypeata
Shoveler
genre_facet Anas clypeata
Shoveler
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/DISSERTATIONS-21188
17930402
op_rights This thesis was part of a retrospective digitization project authorized by the Texas A&M University Libraries. Copyright remains vested with the author(s). It is the user's responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holder(s) for re-use of the work beyond the provision of Fair Use.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
_version_ 1771542124072796160