Diversity (Sep 2022)

Circular Bedforms Due to Pit Foraging of Greater Flamingo <i>Phoenicopterus roseus</i> in a Back-Barrier Intertidal Habitat

  • Paolo Salvador,
  • Annelore Bezzi,
  • Davide Martinucci,
  • Stefano Sponza,
  • Giorgio Fontolan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/d14100788
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
p. 788

Abstract

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The Greater Flamingo Phoenicopterus roseus is known as an ecosystem engineer, rearranging sediment in peculiar bedforms as a consequence of its filter-feeding behaviour. In recent decades, the populations of the Greater Flamingo have notably increased, and now the species is one of the most abundant waterbirds in Mediterranean wetlands. Owing to its range expansion, it inhabits and exploits new and suitable foraging sites detectable by foraging structures left on the sediment. There are few images of the foraging morphologies in the literature, possibly due to their ephemeral nature and difficulty in detecting them. In this manuscript, we present a very detailed UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle) image of an aggregate of pit foraging structures of Greater Flamingo discovered on a back-barrier washover fan in the Marano and Grado Lagoon (Northern Adriatic, Italy).

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