Abstract

Simple SummaryHow congeneric species with similar realized niches manage to coexist is a central question in the study of biodiversity. Here, we examined the daily activity rhythm of two coexisting serow species in a mid-mountain humid evergreen broadleaf forest. We used camera traps in a five-year survey at Mt. Gaoligong, western Yunnan, China. We compared the daily activity rhythm of the rare red serow (Capricornis rubidus), a medium-sized solitary ungulate, with the coexisting Chinese serow (C. milneedwardsii milneedwardsii). Although their overall daily activity rhythms were similar, the rare red serow tended to range, feed, and stay vigilant from afternoon through midnight throughout the year. By contrast, Chinese serows preferred to be active from sunrise to noon in the wet season, but shifted their activities and behaviors to afternoon and midnight in the dry season. Interestingly, we found red serows sometimes ranging together with Chinese serows. When they encountered each other, red serows altered their activity patterns more notably, while Chinese serows significantly increased their activity level. These findings are understandable given their similar resource requirements. Although exploitative competitors, red and Chinese serow coexist by avoiding interference competition by altering their respective activity patterns in time.Surveying the activity rhythms of sympatric herbivorous mammals is essential for understanding their niche ecology, especially for how they partition resources and their mechanisms of coexistence. Over a five-year period, we conducted infrared camera-trapping to monitor the activity rhythms of coexisting red serow (Capricornis rubidus) and Chinese serow (C. milneedwardsii milneedwardsii) in the remote mountainous region of Pianma, Mt. Gaoligong, Yunnan, China. Cameras captured images of red serow and Chinese serow on 157 and 179 occasions, respectively. We used circular kernel density models to analyze daily activity rhythms and how temporal variations in activity ensure their co-existence. Although their overall activity levels and patterns were similar, temporal activity and behavior partitioning among the two species occurred during the wet season. Compared with Chinese serows, red serows exhibited less variable daily activity levels, patterns, as well as feeding and vigilance behaviors between seasons. When the two species occasionally ranged together, red serows tended to alter their activity pattern while Chinese serows significantly increased their activity level. Red serow and Chinese serow are exploitative competitors but coexist by altering their daily activity rhythms when in contact and changing activity patterns during the wet season, enabling their coexistence.

Highlights

  • Viewed from an evolutionary perspective, animal behavior should strategically balance resource acquisition [1]

  • We monitored 50 camera-trapping sites for a total 31,242 trapping days (Figure 1). While both serow species were mostly observed on their own (Table 3), at 54% and 50% (Chinese serow) of the camera-trapping sites, they were observed together at the same sites on thirteen occasions

  • Temporal niche partitioning is very likely occurring between congeneric species occupying the same habitat [1,2,13,14,15,17]

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Summary

Introduction

Viewed from an evolutionary perspective, animal behavior should strategically balance resource acquisition [1]. An animal’s activity rhythm can be defined as “how an individual partitions its behavior over time” while balancing the effects of both abiotic and biotic factors [1,2]. Abiotic factors, such as temperature, rainfall, and light levels, may impact food availability, thermal regulation, and endogenous rhythm, resulting in changes to activity rhythms and time budgets [3,4,5,6,7,8]. To reduce or avoid interference competition and predation, co-existing congeneric species with similar morphological and dietary traits may exhibit differences in their temporal use of resources [2,3,4,6,7,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]

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