Does the evolution of ontogenetic niche shifts favour species coexistence? An empirical test in Trinidadian streams

Author:

Anaya‐Rojas Jaime M.12ORCID,Bassar Ronald D.3ORCID,Matthews Blake4,Goldberg Joshua F.5,King Leighton46ORCID,Reznick David5,Travis Joseph1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Science Florida State University Tallahassee Florida USA

2. Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity University of Münster Münster Germany

3. Department of Biological Sciences Auburn University Auburn Alabama USA

4. Department of Fish Ecology and Evolution, Eawag: Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Biogeochemistry Kastanienbaum Switzerland

5. University of California Riverside Riverside California USA

6. Aquatic Ecology and Evolution Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Bern Bern CH‐3012 Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractA major question in ecology is how often competing species evolve to reduce competitive interactions and facilitate coexistence. One untested route for a reduction in competitive interactions is through ontogenetic changes in the trophic niche of one or more of the interacting species. In such cases, theory predicts that two species can coexist if the weaker competitor changes its resource niche to a greater degree with increased body size than the superior competitor.We tested this prediction using stable isotopes that yield information about the trophic position (δ15N) and carbon source (δ13C) of two coexisting fish species: Trinidadian guppiesPoecilia reticulataand killifishRivulus hartii.We examined fish from locations representing three natural community types: (1) where killifish and guppies live with predators, (2) where killifish and guppies live without predators and (3) where killifish are the only fish species. We also examined killifish from communities in which we had introduced guppies, providing a temporal sequence of the community changes following the transition from a killifish only to a killifish–guppy community.We found that killifish, which are the weaker competitor, had a much larger ontogenetic niche shift in trophic position than guppies in the community where competition is most intense (killifish–guppy only). This result is consistent with theory for size‐structured populations, which predicts that these results should lead to stable coexistence of the two species. Comparisons with other communities containing guppies, killifish and predators and ones where killifish live by themselves revealed that these results are caused primarily by a loss of ontogenetic niche changes in guppies, even though they are the stronger competitor. Comparisons of these natural communities with communities in which guppies were translocated into sites containing only killifish showed that the experimental communities were intermediate between the natural killifish–guppy community and the killifish–guppy–predator community, suggesting contemporary evolution in these ontogenetic trophic differences.These results provide comparative evidence for ontogenetic niche shifts in contributing to species coexistence and comparative and experimental evidence for evolutionary or plastic changes in ontogenetic niche shifts following the formation of new communities.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

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