Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans

Intra-population niche differences in generalist foragers have captured the interest of ecologists, because such individuality can have important ecological and evolutionary implications. Few researchers have investigated how these differences affect the relationships among ecologically similar, sym...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carl S. Cloyed, Perri K. Eason
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2017-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170060
id doaj-7ee4e5ca79d749618bcddca94c0286b7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7ee4e5ca79d749618bcddca94c0286b72020-11-25T04:08:40ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032017-01-014310.1098/rsos.170060170060Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anuransCarl S. CloyedPerri K. EasonIntra-population niche differences in generalist foragers have captured the interest of ecologists, because such individuality can have important ecological and evolutionary implications. Few researchers have investigated how these differences affect the relationships among ecologically similar, sympatric species. Using stable isotopes, stomach contents, morphology and habitat preference, we examined niche partitioning within a group of five anurans and determined whether variation within species could facilitate resource partitioning. Species partitioned their niches by trophic level and by foraging habitat. However, there was considerable intraspecific variation in trophic level, with larger individuals generally feeding at higher trophic levels. For species at intermediate trophic levels, smaller individuals overlapped in trophic level with individuals of smaller species and larger individuals overlapped with the smallest individuals from larger species. Species varied in carbon isotopes; species with enriched carbon isotope ratios foraged farther from ponds, whereas species with depleted carbon isotope values foraged closer to ponds. Our study shows that these species partition their niches by feeding at different trophic levels and foraging at different distances from ponds. The intraspecific variation in trophic level decreased the number of individuals from each species that overlapped in trophic level with individuals from other species, which can facilitate species coexistence.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170060coexistencefrogsintra-population niche variationindividual specializationniche partitioningtoads
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carl S. Cloyed
Perri K. Eason
spellingShingle Carl S. Cloyed
Perri K. Eason
Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
Royal Society Open Science
coexistence
frogs
intra-population niche variation
individual specialization
niche partitioning
toads
author_facet Carl S. Cloyed
Perri K. Eason
author_sort Carl S. Cloyed
title Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
title_short Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
title_full Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
title_fullStr Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
title_full_unstemmed Niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
title_sort niche partitioning and the role of intraspecific niche variation in structuring a guild of generalist anurans
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Intra-population niche differences in generalist foragers have captured the interest of ecologists, because such individuality can have important ecological and evolutionary implications. Few researchers have investigated how these differences affect the relationships among ecologically similar, sympatric species. Using stable isotopes, stomach contents, morphology and habitat preference, we examined niche partitioning within a group of five anurans and determined whether variation within species could facilitate resource partitioning. Species partitioned their niches by trophic level and by foraging habitat. However, there was considerable intraspecific variation in trophic level, with larger individuals generally feeding at higher trophic levels. For species at intermediate trophic levels, smaller individuals overlapped in trophic level with individuals of smaller species and larger individuals overlapped with the smallest individuals from larger species. Species varied in carbon isotopes; species with enriched carbon isotope ratios foraged farther from ponds, whereas species with depleted carbon isotope values foraged closer to ponds. Our study shows that these species partition their niches by feeding at different trophic levels and foraging at different distances from ponds. The intraspecific variation in trophic level decreased the number of individuals from each species that overlapped in trophic level with individuals from other species, which can facilitate species coexistence.
topic coexistence
frogs
intra-population niche variation
individual specialization
niche partitioning
toads
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.170060
work_keys_str_mv AT carlscloyed nichepartitioningandtheroleofintraspecificnichevariationinstructuringaguildofgeneralistanurans
AT perrikeason nichepartitioningandtheroleofintraspecificnichevariationinstructuringaguildofgeneralistanurans
_version_ 1724424490922803200