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New Insights into the Physiology of Natural Foraging*

1Department of Biological Sciences, 3211 Providence Drive, University of Alaska, Anchorage, Alaska 99508; 2Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 100 Shaffer Road, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95060; 3Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487; 4School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Wits 2050, South Africa; 5Institute of Marine Science, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775

The purpose of this symposium was to examine how foraging physiology is studied in the field across a diversity of species and habitats. While field studies are constrained by the relatively poor ability to control the experiment, the natural variability in both the environment and animal behavior provides insights into adaptation to change that are usually not tested in the laboratory. Talks in this session examined how foraging energy (both costs and gains) is partitioned over time. “Time,” in this case, ranged from evolutionary time (how different animals are designed to most efficiently forage), to long, lifetime periods (development of foraging ability and growth), to short‐duration feeding bouts, and ultimately to the minutes to hours following ingestion (metabolic and biochemical changes). From this diversity, two core themes emerged: that foraging strategies and behaviors are limited by physiology and biochemical processes and that time plays a central role in the organization of foraging behaviors and the physiological processes that underlie those behaviors.