Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians

Abstract To date, there has been no published investigation on the trophic diversity in any tepui summit vertebrate. In this paper, we analyzed the dietary composition of a tepui summit endemic toad, Oreophrynella quelchii from Roraima‐tepui, and compared it with that of O. nigra from Kukenán‐tepui,...

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Main Authors: Philippe J. R. Kok, Tessa L. Broholm, Dietrich Mebs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-07-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7682
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spelling doaj-f035d9c070cf4f2e946d19759fa927c42021-09-22T11:50:36ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-07-0111138730874210.1002/ece3.7682Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibiansPhilippe J. R. Kok0Tessa L. Broholm1Dietrich Mebs2Department of Ecology and Vertebrate Zoology University of Łódź Łódź PolandDepartment of Biology Vrije Universiteit Brussel Brussels BelgiumInstitute of Legal Medicine Goethe University of Frankfurt Frankfurt GermanyAbstract To date, there has been no published investigation on the trophic diversity in any tepui summit vertebrate. In this paper, we analyzed the dietary composition of a tepui summit endemic toad, Oreophrynella quelchii from Roraima‐tepui, and compared it with that of O. nigra from Kukenán‐tepui, to examine to what extent diet differs between these two sister species across isolated, although neighboring, tepui tops. The digestive tracts of a total of 197 toads were dissected: 111 from O. quelchii and 86 from O. nigra. The diet composition of O. quelchii was relatively diverse, with 13 major prey categories; mites (Acari, 36.5%) and beetles (Coleoptera, 21.0%) numerically dominated its diet. Despite occurring on two different tepui summits, O. quelchii and O. nigra exhibited a similar diet composition, although in O. nigra mites (Acari, 42.4%) and hymenopterans (especially ants, 16.9%) numerically dominated the diet. The present data suggest that tepui summit Oreophrynella species are flexible in their diet and are active foragers that also feed on aquatic arthropods, successful strategies in tepui competitive environments.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7682dietGuyanaOCBILPantepuitepuitoads
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philippe J. R. Kok
Tessa L. Broholm
Dietrich Mebs
spellingShingle Philippe J. R. Kok
Tessa L. Broholm
Dietrich Mebs
Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
Ecology and Evolution
diet
Guyana
OCBIL
Pantepui
tepui
toads
author_facet Philippe J. R. Kok
Tessa L. Broholm
Dietrich Mebs
author_sort Philippe J. R. Kok
title Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
title_short Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
title_full Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
title_fullStr Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
title_full_unstemmed Thriving in a hostile world: Insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
title_sort thriving in a hostile world: insights from the dietary strategy of two allopatric, closely related tepui summit endemic amphibians
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract To date, there has been no published investigation on the trophic diversity in any tepui summit vertebrate. In this paper, we analyzed the dietary composition of a tepui summit endemic toad, Oreophrynella quelchii from Roraima‐tepui, and compared it with that of O. nigra from Kukenán‐tepui, to examine to what extent diet differs between these two sister species across isolated, although neighboring, tepui tops. The digestive tracts of a total of 197 toads were dissected: 111 from O. quelchii and 86 from O. nigra. The diet composition of O. quelchii was relatively diverse, with 13 major prey categories; mites (Acari, 36.5%) and beetles (Coleoptera, 21.0%) numerically dominated its diet. Despite occurring on two different tepui summits, O. quelchii and O. nigra exhibited a similar diet composition, although in O. nigra mites (Acari, 42.4%) and hymenopterans (especially ants, 16.9%) numerically dominated the diet. The present data suggest that tepui summit Oreophrynella species are flexible in their diet and are active foragers that also feed on aquatic arthropods, successful strategies in tepui competitive environments.
topic diet
Guyana
OCBIL
Pantepui
tepui
toads
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7682
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