“…Foraging is a three-stage process in which animals have to first find food, then handle and consume it and finally determine when to quit. However, much of the foraging ecology theory is about why animals quit food patches (Charnov, 1976;Krebs, 1977;Pyke, 1984), with empirical tests of habitat (Kotler, Brown, & Hasson, 1991) and forager characteristics (Mella, Ward, Banks, & Mcarthur, 2015) that foragers use to decide when to leave. Many studies focused on understanding what characteristics of a food patch make it costly for foragers to stay and have often used the giving-up-density approach (GUD; Brown, 1988) to reveal the mechanisms behind quitting a patch (for a review, see Bedoya-Perez, Carthey, Mella, McArthur, & Banks, 2013), without exploring the reasons that attract animals to that patch.…”