Phenotype predicts interspecific dominance hierarchies in a cloud‐forest hummingbird guild

Author:

Fernandez‐Duque Facundo123ORCID,Miller Eliot T.4,Fernandez‐Duque Matias5,Falk Jay6,Venable Gabriela27,Rabinowicz Sophie8,Becker C. Dustin3,Hauber Mark E.1910

Affiliation:

1. Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology, School of Integrative Biology University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana Illinois USA

2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

3. Life Net Nature Reserva Las Tangaras Mindo Ecuador

4. Cornell Lab of Ornithology Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

5. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders Northwestern University Chicago Illinois USA

6. Department of Biology University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

7. Department of Evolutionary Anthropology Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

8. College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Cornell University Ithaca New York USA

9. Advanced Science Research Center and Program in Psychology Graduate Center of the City University of New York New York New York USA

10. American Museum of Natural History New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractCompetition over resources often leads to intra‐ and interspecific interactions, which can be detrimental to the individuals involved. Thus, natural selection should favor communication systems that reliably convey information regarding the relative competitive abilities of an individual, reducing the need for physically damaging confrontation. Body size, sex, age, relatedness, and ornamentation are important factors determining dominance across diverse taxa in intraspecific interactions. These traits, when perceptible, may serve as signals across species in guilds that have frequent interspecific interactions. Hummingbirds provide a tractable system to study such community dynamics due to their high frequency of interactions, variable ornamentation, diverse body sizes, fast metabolism, and large overlap in resource utilization. Even in this system, potential interactions between morphology and coloration are rarely accounted for together when analyzing dominance between species. We take a novel approach to understanding interspecific dominance by assessing behavior, morphology, and coloration across different types of behavioral interactions. Across 11 tropical montane hummingbird species, we find that dominance is predicted by wing size and some metrics of plumage coloration. However, the biological significance of these factors varies between the different dominance behaviors performed. These results inform our understanding of interspecific signaling and its role in the evolution of intraguild communication and resource competition.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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