Study site map.
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posted on 2021-12-31, 18:33 authored by Scott Jennings, David Lumpkin, Nils Warnock, T. Emiko Condeso, John P. KellyA: Tomales Bay, CA, where selection and foraging behavior of GPS-tagged great egrets was investigated from 2017 to 2020. The three trapping locations are indicated with a line terminating at the location. Eelgrass is shown in dark gray and shellfish aquaculture infrastructure shown in black. B: Aerial photo looking southwest along the southern tip of Toms Point, showing a typical arrangement of shellfish aquaculture infrastructure and eelgrass beds (submerged vegetation bayward from shellfish gear). Copyright © ESRI. All rights reserved. Photo credit: Richard James/coastodian.org.
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studied habitat selectionrising sea levelslonger time scalesgreat egrets acrossgreat egret (<div >< pcomparing speed travelledardea alba landscape may disruptalso evaluated differences>) habitat selectionshellfish aquaculture infrastructuresuitable foraging habitatmuch narrower rangecomparing natural wetlandsadjacent natural wetlandsshellfish aquaculture areasshellfish aquaculturenatural wetlandstidal wetlandsslight differencesmay change>) foragingnatural cycleswetland typeswater depthswater depthtomales baytidal marshtemperate estuaryresults suggestresults conditionalpassive processesoverall valuehuman alterationforaging behaviorenergy expendeddifferent habitatsconsequently changebased changesactive management
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