Temporal avoidance as a means of reducing competition between sympatric species

Author:

Maziarz Marta12ORCID,Broughton Richard K.13ORCID,Beck Kristina B.1ORCID,Robinson Robert A.4ORCID,Sheldon Ben C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Edward Grey Institute, Department of Biology, Oxford University, Oxford OX1 3SZ, UK

2. Polish Academy of Sciences, Museum and Institute of Zoology, Wilcza 64, Warsaw 00-679, Poland

3. UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford OX10 8BB, UK

4. British Trust for Ornithology, The Nunnery, Thetford IP24 2PU, UK

Abstract

Human activity has modified the availability of natural resources and the abundance of species that rely on them, potentially changing interspecific competition dynamics. Here, we use large-scale automated data collection to quantify spatio-temporal competition among species with contrasting population trends. We focus on the spatial and temporal foraging behaviour of subordinate marsh titsPoecile palustrisamong groups of socially and numerically dominant blue titsCyanistes caeruleusand great titsParus major. The three species exploit similar food resources in mixed groups during autumn–winter. Using 421 077 winter recordings of individually marked birds at 65 automated feeding stations in Wytham Woods (Oxfordshire, UK), we found that marsh tits were less likely to join larger groups of heterospecifics, and they accessed food less frequently in larger groups than in smaller ones. Marsh tit numbers within groups declined throughout the diurnal and winter periods, while the number of blue and great tits increased. However, sites that attracted larger groups of these heterospecifics also attracted more marsh tits. The results suggest that subordinate species exhibit temporal avoidance of socially and numerically dominant heterospecifics, but have limited ability for spatial avoidance, indicating that behavioural plasticity enables only a partial reduction of interspecific competition.

Funder

ERC Advanced Grant

the Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange, the Bekker Programme

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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