Abstract

Globally, human activities have led to the impoverishment of species assemblages and the disruption of ecosystem function. Determining whether this poses a threat to future ecosystem stability necessitates a thorough understanding of mechanisms underpinning community assembly and niche selection. Here, we tested for niche segregation within an African small carnivore community in Kibale National Park, Uganda. We used occupancy modeling based on systematic camera trap surveys and fine‐scale habitat measures, to identify opposing preferences between closely related species (cats, genets, and mongooses). We modeled diel activity patterns using kernel density functions and calculated the overlap of activity periods between related species. We also used co‐occupancy modeling and activity overlap analyses to test whether African golden cats Caracal aurata influenced the smaller carnivores along the spatial and/or temporal axes. There was some evidence that related species segregated habitat and activity patterns. Specialization was particularly strong among forest species. The cats and genets partitioned habitat, while the mongooses partitioned both habitat and activity period. We found little evidence for interference competition between African golden cats and other small carnivores, although weak interference competition was suggested by lower detection probabilities of some species at stations where African golden cats were present. This suggests that community assembly and coexistence in this ecosystem are primarily driven by more complex processes. The studied carnivore community contains several forest specialists, which are typically more prone to localized extinction. Preserving the observed community assemblage will therefore require the maintenance of a large variety of habitats, with a particular focus on those required by the more specialized carnivores.

Highlights

  • The effective maintenance of biodiversity and ecosystem processes requires the preservation of diverse functional communities (Brose & Hillebrand, 2016; Connell & Ghedini, 2015; Supp & Ernest, 2014)

  • Niche partitioning between closely related species and weak interference competition play a role in the observed community membership, and niche selection

  • We found that the African golden cat and servaline genet were for‐ est specialists and the African civet was a habitat generalist, which confirms current understanding of these species' ecology (Ray, 2013; Ray & Butynski, 2013; Van Rompaey & Colyn, 2013)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The effective maintenance of biodiversity and ecosystem processes requires the preservation of diverse functional communities (Brose & Hillebrand, 2016; Connell & Ghedini, 2015; Supp & Ernest, 2014). Even inter‐ specific competition is not straightforward, since there is evidence that strong intraspecific competition in a dominant species can ac‐ tually facilitate positive population growth in rare species (Chesson, 2000) Both natural and human‐derived perturbations to ecosys‐ tems can dramatically change how these processes influence com‐ munity structure and function over time (Mouillot, Graham, Villéger, Mason, & Bellwood, 2013). Most research far has focused on large species (Ripple & Beschta, 2012; Wolfe et al, 2015) It is import‐ ant to understand how different mechanisms influence the success‐ ful coexistence of entire carnivore communities, poorly studied small species (Gompper, Lesmeister, Ray, Malcolm, & Kays, 2016). Where a spe‐ cies falls on the generalist–specialist gradient influences

Conclusions
| METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
| CONCLUSIONS
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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