Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species
Theory suggests that body size is an important factor in determining interspecific competition and, ultimately, in structuring ecological communities. However, there is a lack of pragmatic studies linking body size and interspecific competition to patterns in ecological communities. The objective of the present study was to determine the effect of body size (mass) on competitive interactions between bird pairs and to investigate the influence of food guilds. Point-counts were carried out in nine sites every month from November 2002 to November 2003 in the Cuetzalan Region, Mexico, and we used presence/absence and abundance data for the analyses. To calculate the strength of competition we used the Angle Frequency Method to extract form factors from 20 pairwise interactions. A prototype competition interaction and random pairs were also constructed. We used clustering techniques (PCA) to calculate the dissimilarity scores (distances, D) of each of the pairwise interactions to the prototype competition and random pairs and one-way ANOVA to test for differences between the means of the random and competitive pairs.
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Comunidades de aves Índice de masa corporal Forrajeo Competencia interespecífica Comunidades de aves Índice de masa corporal Forrajeo Competencia interespecífica Leyequién Abarca, Eurídice autor/a 14208 de Boer, Willem Frederik autor/a 15076 Cleef, Antoine M. autor/a Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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Theory suggests that body size is an important factor in determining interspecific competition and, ultimately, in structuring ecological communities. However, there is a lack of pragmatic studies linking body size and interspecific competition to patterns in ecological communities. The objective of the present study was to determine the effect of body size (mass) on competitive interactions between bird pairs and to investigate the influence of food guilds. Point-counts were carried out in nine sites every month from November 2002 to November 2003 in the Cuetzalan Region, Mexico, and we used presence/absence and abundance data for the analyses. To calculate the strength of competition we used the Angle Frequency Method to extract form factors from 20 pairwise interactions. A prototype competition interaction and random pairs were also constructed. We used clustering techniques (PCA) to calculate the dissimilarity scores (distances, D) of each of the pairwise interactions to the prototype competition and random pairs and one-way ANOVA to test for differences between the means of the random and competitive pairs. |
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Comunidades de aves Índice de masa corporal Forrajeo Competencia interespecífica |
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Leyequién Abarca, Eurídice autor/a 14208 de Boer, Willem Frederik autor/a 15076 Cleef, Antoine M. autor/a |
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Leyequién Abarca, Eurídice autor/a 14208 de Boer, Willem Frederik autor/a 15076 Cleef, Antoine M. autor/a |
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Leyequién Abarca, Eurídice autor/a 14208 |
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Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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Influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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influence of body size on coexistence of bird species |
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AT leyequienabarcaeuridiceautora14208 influenceofbodysizeoncoexistenceofbirdspecies AT deboerwillemfrederikautora15076 influenceofbodysizeoncoexistenceofbirdspecies AT cleefantoinemautora influenceofbodysizeoncoexistenceofbirdspecies |
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KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:391582021-09-28T18:35:33ZInfluence of body size on coexistence of bird species Leyequién Abarca, Eurídice autor/a 14208 de Boer, Willem Frederik autor/a 15076 Cleef, Antoine M. autor/a textengTheory suggests that body size is an important factor in determining interspecific competition and, ultimately, in structuring ecological communities. However, there is a lack of pragmatic studies linking body size and interspecific competition to patterns in ecological communities. The objective of the present study was to determine the effect of body size (mass) on competitive interactions between bird pairs and to investigate the influence of food guilds. Point-counts were carried out in nine sites every month from November 2002 to November 2003 in the Cuetzalan Region, Mexico, and we used presence/absence and abundance data for the analyses. To calculate the strength of competition we used the Angle Frequency Method to extract form factors from 20 pairwise interactions. A prototype competition interaction and random pairs were also constructed. We used clustering techniques (PCA) to calculate the dissimilarity scores (distances, D) of each of the pairwise interactions to the prototype competition and random pairs and one-way ANOVA to test for differences between the means of the random and competitive pairs.The ratio in body mass (lnBM) for each of the interacting pairs was calculated, and the association between the lnBM ratio and the strength of competition (D) was tested using a Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient. To test for the influence of foraging guilds we used a univariate general linear model. Our results demonstrate a significant negative relationship between bird body mass ratio and competition strength - i.e. competition strength increased when the body masses of the birds became more similar. We did not find a significant influence of foraging guild on the relationship between body mass ratio and competition strength. On the basis of these results, we suggest that high variation in body sizes amongst sympatric species promotes coexistence in communities.Theory suggests that body size is an important factor in determining interspecific competition and, ultimately, in structuring ecological communities. However, there is a lack of pragmatic studies linking body size and interspecific competition to patterns in ecological communities. The objective of the present study was to determine the effect of body size (mass) on competitive interactions between bird pairs and to investigate the influence of food guilds. Point-counts were carried out in nine sites every month from November 2002 to November 2003 in the Cuetzalan Region, Mexico, and we used presence/absence and abundance data for the analyses. To calculate the strength of competition we used the Angle Frequency Method to extract form factors from 20 pairwise interactions. A prototype competition interaction and random pairs were also constructed. We used clustering techniques (PCA) to calculate the dissimilarity scores (distances, D) of each of the pairwise interactions to the prototype competition and random pairs and one-way ANOVA to test for differences between the means of the random and competitive pairs.The ratio in body mass (lnBM) for each of the interacting pairs was calculated, and the association between the lnBM ratio and the strength of competition (D) was tested using a Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient. To test for the influence of foraging guilds we used a univariate general linear model. Our results demonstrate a significant negative relationship between bird body mass ratio and competition strength - i.e. competition strength increased when the body masses of the birds became more similar. We did not find a significant influence of foraging guild on the relationship between body mass ratio and competition strength. On the basis of these results, we suggest that high variation in body sizes amongst sympatric species promotes coexistence in communities.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorComunidades de avesÍndice de masa corporalForrajeoCompetencia interespecíficaDisponible en líneaEcological ResearchDisponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso |