Abstract

The basic hypothesis is that an animal which is defending a territory will adopt a territory size and a time budget which maximize its individual Darwinian fitness (i.e., which are optimal). Consideration of possible currencies of fitness leads to the following subhypotheses concerning territorial behavior. (i) Territorial behavior maximizes net daily energy gain subject to constraints. (ii) Time spent sitting or resting is maximized subject to constraints. (iii) Daily energetic cost is minimized subject to constraints. (iv) The ratio of gross daily energy gain to the daily energy cost is maximized subject to constraints. The constraints that are included are: (i) Net daily energy gain must be nonnegative, and (ii) the total amount of time available per day for the activities of feeding, sitting and territorial defense is fixed. A mathematical model of territory size and time budget is formulated for nectar-feeding birds. From this model and from data collected by Gill and Wolf (1975a), the optimal te...

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