Foraging niche segregation in Malaysian babblers (Family: Timaliidae)

Tropical rainforests are considered as hotspots for bird diversity, yet little is known about the system that upholds the coexistence of species. Differences in body size that are associated with foraging strategies and spatial distribution are believed to promote the coexistence of closely related...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2017-03, Vol.12 (3), p.e0172836-e0172836
Hauptverfasser: Mansor, Mohammad Saiful, Ramli, Rosli
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description Tropical rainforests are considered as hotspots for bird diversity, yet little is known about the system that upholds the coexistence of species. Differences in body size that are associated with foraging strategies and spatial distribution are believed to promote the coexistence of closely related species by reducing competition. However, the fact that many babbler species do not differ significantly in their morphology has challenged this view. We studied the foraging ecology of nine sympatric babbler species (i.e., Pellorneum capistratum, P. bicolor, P. malaccense, Malacopteron cinereum, M. magnum, Stachyris nigriceps, S. nigricollis, S. maculata, and Cyanoderma erythropterum) in the Krau Wildlife Reserve in Peninsular Malaysia. We investigated; i) how these babblers forage in the wild and use vegetation to obtain food, and ii) how these trophically similar species differ in spatial distribution and foraging tactics. Results indicated that most babblers foraged predominantly on aerial leaf litter and used gleaning manoeuvre in intermediate-density foliage but exhibited wide ranges of vertical strata usage, thus reducing interspecific competition. The principal component analysis indicated that two components, i.e., foraging height and substrate are important as mechanisms to allow the coexistence of sympatric babblers. The present findings revealed that these bird species have unique foraging niches that are distinct from each other, and this may apply to other insectivorous birds inhabiting tropical forests. This suggests that niche separation does occur among coexisting birds, thus following Gause' law of competitive exclusion, which states two species occupying the same niche will not stably coexist.
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subjects Animal behavior
Animals
Biology and Life Sciences
Birds
Body size
Coexistence
Competition
Cyanoderma
Ecological monitoring
Ecology
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Feeding Behavior
Foliage
Forage
Forages
Foraging (Animal feeding behavior)
Foraging behavior
Interspecific
Leaf litter
Malaysia
Niches
Passeriformes - classification
Passeriformes - physiology
Physical Sciences
Physiological aspects
Principal components analysis
Rainforest
Rainforests
Research and Analysis Methods
Resource partitioning (Ecology)
Small mammals
Spatial distribution
Species
Species Specificity
Substrates
Sympatric populations
Tactics
Timaliidae
Tropical forests
Wildlife
title Foraging niche segregation in Malaysian babblers (Family: Timaliidae)
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