What is habitat quality?:Dissecting a research portfolio on shorebirds

It is intriguing that the fourth edition of the main British ecology textbook Ecology: From Individuals to Ecosystems (Begon et al., 2006) does not include habitat selection or habitat choice amongst the keywords in the subject index. What can be found is the word niche. Of course, this concept is c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Piersma, Theun
Other Authors: Fuller, Robert J.
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/efe03759-c0cc-48f8-8069-db7e9ada1eb7
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/efe03759-c0cc-48f8-8069-db7e9ada1eb7
https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139021654.019
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/birds-and-habitat/what-is-habitat-quality-dissecting-a-research-portfolio-on-shorebirds/79681F92039A49807DC7D15169533D4D
Description
Summary:It is intriguing that the fourth edition of the main British ecology textbook Ecology: From Individuals to Ecosystems (Begon et al., 2006) does not include habitat selection or habitat choice amongst the keywords in the subject index. What can be found is the word niche. Of course, this concept is closely bound up with the concepts related to the use and selection of habitats, as discussed in the present book. Nevertheless, Begon et al. (2006, p. 31) have interesting things to say about the relationships between the niche concept and the use of habitat, so let’s start with a citation: ‘The term ecological niche . . . is often used loosely to describe the sort of place in which an organism lives, as in the sentence: “Woodlands are the niche of woodpeckers”. Strictly, however, where an organism lives is its habitat. A niche is not a place but an idea: a summary of the organism’s tolerances and requirements. The habitat of a gut micro-organism would be an animal’s alimentary canal; the habitat of an aphid might be a garden; and the habitat of a fish could be a whole lake. Each habitat, however, provides many different niches: many other organisms also live in the gut, the garden or the lake – and with quite different lifestyles.’ This chapter presents a rather personal account of the attempts by myself and co-workers to explain the distribution and abundance of shorebirds, especially during the non-breeding season. We have tried to explain why non-breeding shorebirds use certain mudflats more than others, and why different individuals may use the same area in such different ways. In addition to the population and individual levels, we have also addressed questions on habitat selection at the species level, such as why some shorebird species use coastal rather than freshwater wetlands during the non-breeding season, and why some shorebird species breed on High Arctic tundra rather than in temperate grasslands (a behaviour that condemns them to very long migrations to escape the polar winters).