Prey-switching does not protect a generalist turtle from bioenergetic consequences when its preferred food is scarce
Background: Optimal foraging theory explains how animals make foraging decisions based on the availability, nutritional content, and handling times of different food types. Generalists solve this problem by consuming a variety of food types, and switch between them with relative ease. Specialists ea...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Optimal foraging theory explains how animals make foraging
decisions based on the availability, nutritional content, and handling
times of different food types. Generalists solve this problem by consuming
a variety of food types, and switch between them with relative
ease. Specialists eat few food types, and may starve if those food types
are not available. We integrated stable isotope analyses with
previously-published stomach contents and environmental data to
investigate how the foraging ecologies of three sympatric freshwater
turtle species vary across four wetlands that differ in turbidity and
primary producer abundance. Results: We found that the
generalist Emydura macquarii consumes a varied diet (but mostly
filamentous green algae) when primary producers are available and water is
clear, but switches to a more carnivorous diet when primary producers are
scarce, following the predictions of optimal foraging theory. In
contrast, two more-specialized carnivorous
species, Chelodina expansa and Chelodina longicollis, do not differ in
diet across wetlands, and interspecific competition may increase
where E. macquarii is carnivorous. When forced to be more
carnivorous, E. macquarii exhibits higher rates of empty stomachs, and
female turtles have reduced body condition, but neither Chelodina species
are affected. Conclusions: Our results provide support for optimal
foraging theory, but also show that the ability to change diet does not
protect the generalist from experiencing lower foraging success when its
preferred food is rare, with direct consequences for their energy budgets.
Our results have conservation implications because wetlands in the
Murray-Darling river system are increasingly turbid and have
low macrophyte abundance, and all three species are declining. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.z34tmpg8v |