The distribution of plant consumption traits across habitat types and the patterns of fruit availability suggest a mechanism of coexistence of two sympatric frugivorous mammals
Understanding the mechanisms governing the coexistence of organisms is an important question in ecology, and providing potential solutions contributes to conservation science. In this study, we evaluated the contribution of several mechanisms to the coexistence of two sympatric frugivores, using wes...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding the mechanisms governing the coexistence of organisms is an
important question in ecology, and providing potential solutions
contributes to conservation science. In this study, we evaluated the
contribution of several mechanisms to the coexistence of two sympatric
frugivores, using western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla) and
central chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes troglodytes) in a tropical rainforest
of southeast Cameroon as a model system. We collected great ape fecal
samples to determine and classify fruit species consumed; we conducted
great ape nest surveys to evaluate seasonal patterns of habitat use; and
we collected botanical data to investigate the distribution of plant
species across habitat types in relation to their “consumption traits”
(which indicate whether plants are preferred or fallback for either
gorilla, chimpanzee, or both). We found that patterns of habitat use
varied seasonally for both gorillas and chimpanzees and that gorilla and
chimpanzee preferred and fallback fruits differed. Also, the distribution
of plant consumption traits was influenced by habitat type and matched
accordingly with the patterns of habitat use by gorillas and chimpanzees.
We show that neither habitat selection nor fruit preference alone can
explain the coexistence of gorillas and chimpanzees, but that considering
together the distribution of plant consumption traits of fruiting woody
plants across habitats as well as the pattern of fruit availability may
contribute to explaining coexistence. This supports the assumptions of
niche theory with dominant and subordinate species in heterogeneous
landscapes, whereby a species may prefer nesting in habitats where it is
less subject to competitive exclusion and where food availability is
higher. To our knowledge, our study is the first to investigate the
contribution of plant consumption traits, seasonality, and habitat
heterogeneity to enabling the coexistence of two sympatric frugivores. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.ms65f29 |