Aggregative responses of predatory birds and fish to their prey are stronger at some spatial scales than others. In waders feeding on benthic invertebrates, aggregative responses decrease in strength at scales less than 100 m. However, decoupling of predator density or consumption rate from prey density at smaller spatial scales has not been tested experimentally. Three wader species (an endemic species, South Island Pied Oystercatcher Haematopus ostralegus finschi Martens, and the migratory species Red Knot, Calidris canutus rogersi (Mathews) and Eastern Bar-tailed Godwit, Limosa lapponica baueri Naumann) were abundant on an intertidal sandflat in Manukau Harbour, New Zealand before, during and after an experiment in which densities of their bivalve prey (Macomona liliana Iredale) were manipulated on a small scale (0.5-m x 0.5-m plots) within a 250-m x 500-m study site. Faecal dropping analysis was used to confirm the diet of South Island Pied Oystercatchers and Red Knot, and to determine the diet of Bar-tailed Godwits. Based on knowledge of the foraging behaviour of these waders, we predicted the following responses to the experimentally-induced increases in bivalve density: 1. waders would discover and then focus their foraging on plots with experimentally elevated densities of Macomona liliana; 2. wader density within the study site would increase during the course of the experiment; and 3. wader density would then decrease when experimental plots were removed. To test these predictions the density and rate of prey attack by waders were measured before, during and after the density-manipulation experiment. Although the waders discovered the experimental aggregations of prey, there was no response at the scale of the plot, or at the larger scale of the study site. This study is the first experimental verification of no response by waders to small-scale increases in prey patchiness, where larger scale changes in patchiness were controlled. We hypothesize that a lower limit on the spatial scale of aggregative response is set by the mobility of prey relative to the predator-the patch structure of a relatively immobile prey will change on a much smaller scale than that of a highly mobile prey, and their respective predators become adapted accordingly. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.