Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia

Impacts of ecological competition are reduced when organisms play different roles in their environment. More individuals can survive on varied but finite sets of resources when organisms eat different kinds of prey, live in different places, or are active at different times. Species within an assemb...

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Main Author: Goodyear, Stephen Edward
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-08-3849
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-08-38492015-09-20T17:04:14ZVariation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western AustraliaGoodyear, Stephen EdwardLizardsWestern AustraliaGreat Victoria DesertCompetitionResource useCommunity ecologyImpacts of ecological competition are reduced when organisms play different roles in their environment. More individuals can survive on varied but finite sets of resources when organisms eat different kinds of prey, live in different places, or are active at different times. Species within an assemblage of small fossorial snakes have ecologies that vary mostly by diet. Different species eat very different things. Species live in different habitats on sand ridges, but the differences are less dramatic than in diet. Disparity in resource use typically varies the most according to species, so that individuals of the same species are more similar to each other than they are to individuals of other species. However, variation exists in resource use within species over time and space. Wide variation exists in dietary resource use in four well-sampled species of comb-eared skinks. However, where species occur at the same study site there are clear distinctions in resource use between species despite the wide variation in diets observed between individuals of the same species. Additionally, strict ecological distances in diet between species are maintained during five censuses that were conducted over a 16-year period. These results illustrate the basic ecological principals of fundamental and realized niches. Here, individuals ate many different food items and species have the potential to overlap in diet but that overlap is reduced because of realized ecological boundaries between species within a single place and time, which result in decreased competition for resources.text2011-11-04T17:33:02Z2011-11-04T17:33:02Z2011-082011-11-04August 20112011-11-04T17:33:13Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-08-38492152/ETD-UT-2011-08-3849eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Lizards
Western Australia
Great Victoria Desert
Competition
Resource use
Community ecology
spellingShingle Lizards
Western Australia
Great Victoria Desert
Competition
Resource use
Community ecology
Goodyear, Stephen Edward
Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia
description Impacts of ecological competition are reduced when organisms play different roles in their environment. More individuals can survive on varied but finite sets of resources when organisms eat different kinds of prey, live in different places, or are active at different times. Species within an assemblage of small fossorial snakes have ecologies that vary mostly by diet. Different species eat very different things. Species live in different habitats on sand ridges, but the differences are less dramatic than in diet. Disparity in resource use typically varies the most according to species, so that individuals of the same species are more similar to each other than they are to individuals of other species. However, variation exists in resource use within species over time and space. Wide variation exists in dietary resource use in four well-sampled species of comb-eared skinks. However, where species occur at the same study site there are clear distinctions in resource use between species despite the wide variation in diets observed between individuals of the same species. Additionally, strict ecological distances in diet between species are maintained during five censuses that were conducted over a 16-year period. These results illustrate the basic ecological principals of fundamental and realized niches. Here, individuals ate many different food items and species have the potential to overlap in diet but that overlap is reduced because of realized ecological boundaries between species within a single place and time, which result in decreased competition for resources. === text
author Goodyear, Stephen Edward
author_facet Goodyear, Stephen Edward
author_sort Goodyear, Stephen Edward
title Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia
title_short Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia
title_full Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia
title_fullStr Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in Western Australia
title_sort variation in diet and habitat resource use in desert adapted lizards in western australia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-08-3849
work_keys_str_mv AT goodyearstephenedward variationindietandhabitatresourceuseindesertadaptedlizardsinwesternaustralia
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