International audienceThe small-scale spatial distribution of Dunlin Calidris alpina staging and wintering in Bourgneuf Bay (France) was investigated on two different mudflats colonized by either epipsammic- or epipelic-dominated microphytobenthos assemblages. Shorebird counts were conducted monthly at ebb tide from October 2011 to May 2012 and from November 2012 to May 2013. Multiple linear regressions followed by hierarchical partitioning of variance showed that microphytobenthos biomass was not a significant factor to explain Dunlin densities. However, on epipelic-dominated mudflats, Dunlins did not show their typical ‘‘tide follower’’ behaviour and instead significantly selected the highest microphytobenthos biomass zones. The biomass of a gastropod predator of an important local Dunlin prey, Retusa obtusa, was negatively correlated with Dunlin densities. This paper provides new suggestions in the ways that biofilms on mudflats affect small shorebird foraging
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