Data from: Sex-specific winter distribution in a sexually dimorphic shorebird is explained by resource partitioning
Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) implies correlated differences in energetic requirements and feeding opportunities, such that sexes will face different trade-offs in habitat selection. In seasonal migrants, this could result in a differential spatial distribution across the wintering range. To identify...
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Zusammenfassung: | Sexual size dimorphism (SSD) implies correlated differences in energetic
requirements and feeding opportunities, such that sexes will face
different trade-offs in habitat selection. In seasonal migrants, this
could result in a differential spatial distribution across the wintering
range. To identify the ecological causes of sexual spatial segregation, we
studied a sexually dimorphic shorebird, the bar-tailed godwit Limosa
lapponica, in which females have a larger body and a longer bill than
males. With respect to the trade-offs that these migratory shorebirds
experience in their choice of wintering area, northern and colder
wintering sites have the benefit of being closer to the Arctic breeding
grounds. According to Bergmann's rule, the larger females should
incur lower energetic costs per unit of body mass over males, helping them
to winter in the cold. However, as the sexes have rather different bill
lengths, differences in sex-specific wintering sites could also be due to
the vertical distribution of their buried prey, that is, resource
partitioning. Here, in a comparison between six main intertidal wintering
areas across the entire winter range of the lapponica subspecies in
northwest Europe, we show that the percentage of females between sites was
not correlated with the cost of wintering, but was positively correlated
with the biomass in the bottom layer and negatively with the biomass in
the top layer. We conclude that resource partitioning, rather than
relative expenditure advantages, best explains the differential spatial
distribution of male and female bar-tailed godwits across northwest
Europe. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.71ds5 |