Author:
Righetti Joanne,Fox Barry J.,Croft David B.
Abstract
The competitive behaviour of three species of small dasyurid marsupial,
Antechinus swainsonii,
Antechinus stuartii and
Sminthopsis murina, was assessed in specially designed
enclosures and smaller encounter cages, by videotaping the activity of pairs
of animals, both as conspecifics and members of different species (except for
A. swainsoni versus S. murina).
Spatio-temporal analyses revealed differences in activity patterns and
interactions within and between the species. Interference competition occurred
in all intraspecific and interspecific comparisons tested. Encounter
competition was judged to be the mechanism operating as all animals entered
into interactions with other individuals. Encounters were particularly
prevalent within Antechinus, indicating that they were
more social than the relatively solitary Sminthopsis.
Avoidance behaviour occurred between the two Antechinus
species and this may enable them to coexist, so that this mechanism may be
considered to be avoidance competition. The smaller competitor,
S. murina, showed avoidance of the larger
A. stuartii. Intraspecific competition was judged to be
stronger than interspecific competition, but the latter could have more severe
consequences, with the death of the smaller species occurring in some
situations. This highlighted the asymmetric nature of competition, with body
size determining the outcome of interactions between species.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
18 articles.
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