Abstract
Ecological niche theory predicts sympatric species to show segregation in their spatio-temporal habitat utilization or diet as a strategy to avoid competition. Similarly, within species individuals may specialize on specific dietary resources or foraging habitats. Such individual specialization seems to occur particularly in environments with predictable resource distribution and limited environmental variability. Still, little is known about how seasonal environmental variability affects segregation of resources within species and between closely related sympatric species. The aim of the study was to investigate the foraging behaviour of three closely related and sympatrically breeding fulmarine petrels (Antarctic petrels Thalassoica antarctica, cape petrels Daption capense and southern fulmars Fulmarus glacialoides) in a seasonally highly variable environment (Prydz Bay, Antarctica) with the aim of assessing inter- and intraspecific overlap in utilized habitat, timing of foraging and diet and to identify foraging habitat preferences. We used GPS loggers with wet/dry sensors to assess spatial habitat utilization over the entire breeding season. Trophic overlap was investigated using stable isotope analysis based on blood, feathers and egg membranes. Foraging locations were identified using wet/dry data recorded by the GPS loggers and expectation-maximization binary clustering. Foraging habitat preferences were modelled using generalized additive models and model cross-validation. During incubation and chick-rearing, the utilization distribution of all three species overlapped significantly and species also overlapped in the timing of foraging during the day-partly during incubation and completely during chick-rearing. Isotopic centroids showed no significant segregation between at least two species for feathers and egg membranes, and among all species during incubation (reflected by blood). Within species, there was no individual specialization in foraging sites or environmental space. Furthermore, no single environmental covariate predicted foraging activity along trip trajectories. Instead, best-explanatory environmental covariates varied within and between individuals even across short temporal scales, reflecting a highly generalist behaviour of birds. Our results may be explained by optimal foraging theory. In the highly productive but spatio-temporally variable Antarctic environment, being a generalist may be key to finding mobile prey-even though this increases the potential for competition within and among sympatric species.
Highlights
Table S8.2. 95% ellipse areas for small sample sizes of Antarctic petrels, cape petrels and southern fulmars and overlap among species. % of niche area overlap of both species was calculated as [area of overlapping region] / ([area of ellipse 1] + [area of ellipse 2] - [area of the overlapping region]) and reflects the shared niche space. 95% ellipse areas were calculated for egg membrane, whole blood and feathers (reflecting the chick rearing period (albeit of previous year(s))
Whole blood Antarctic petrel & cape petrel Antarctic petrel & southern fulmar Cape petrel & southern fulmar
Summary
Table S8.2. 95% ellipse areas (i.e. encompassing 95% of individuals) for small sample sizes of Antarctic petrels, cape petrels and southern fulmars and overlap among species (calculated as % overlap for each species). % of niche area overlap of both species was calculated as [area of overlapping region] / ([area of ellipse 1] + [area of ellipse 2] - [area of the overlapping region]) and reflects the shared niche space. 95% ellipse areas were calculated for egg membrane (reflecting the pre-incubation period), whole blood (reflecting the incubation period) and feathers (reflecting the chick rearing period (albeit of previous year(s)). 95% ellipse areas (i.e. encompassing 95% of individuals) for small sample sizes of Antarctic petrels, cape petrels and southern fulmars and overlap among species (calculated as % overlap for each species).
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