@article {KNZ0069, title = {Central place foraging for non-food items: determination of the stick size value relationship of house building materials collected by eastern woodrats}, journal = {The American Naturalist}, volume = {123}, year = {1984}, pages = {841 -853}, abstract = {

Eastern woodrats (Nemotoma floridana) are medium-sized, nocturnal rodents that collect sticks and other objects as house building materials. A house is inhabited by one woodrat at a time, and provides many benefits to the occupant including protection from predators, protection from the weather, and a safe food storage site. Woodrats range from their houses to retrieve sticks and thus offer the opportunity to examine central place foraging for nonfood items. This paper examines procedures for determining the stick size-value relationship for woodrats initiating house building

}, keywords = {LTER-KNZ, forage, nest}, doi = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/2460904}, author = {McGinley, M.A.} }