Abstract

Foraging niche overlap between attendant species and the nuclear species of mixed-species flocks may induce competition as well as facilitation. In this study, we hypothesized that canopy species would appear more frequently in flocks where nuclear species foraged in the canopy and that species with greater niche overlap with nuclear species would have lower departure rates. Flocking and foraging behaviors of flocks led by the Grey-cheeked Fulvetta Alcippe morrisonia were studied in northeastern Taiwan for two consecutive non-breeding seasons from 1998 to 2000. The foraging height spectrum increased with increasing group size of fulvettas because more fulvettas were found foraging across different strata. The number of species and number of individuals of canopy attendants in a flock increased more rapidly than understory attendants as the group size of fulvettas increased. The more the foraging height of an attendant species overlapped with that of the nuclear species, the lower its departure rate. Specifically, canopy attendant species that usually had a lower niche overlap with the nuclear species dropped out of the flock more frequently than understory attendant species. These observations indicate that foraging niche overlap between attendant species and the nuclear species may facilitate the formation of mixed-species bird flocks. It is therefore important to incorporate the role of positive interactions when trying to understand the formation and maintenance of biological communities.

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