Abstract

Territorial aggression influences fitness and, in monogamous pairs, the behavior of both individuals could impact reproductive success. Moreover, territorial aggression is particularly important in the context of interspecific competition. Tree swallows and eastern bluebirds are highly aggressive, secondary cavity-nesting birds that compete for limited nesting sites. We studied eastern bluebirds at a field site in the southern Appalachian Mountains that has been recently colonized (<40 yr) by tree swallows undergoing a natural range expansion. The field site is composed of distinct areas where bluebirds compete regularly with tree swallows and areas where there is little interaction between the two species. Once birds had settled, we measured how interspecific competition affects the relationship between assortative mating (paired individuals that behave similarly) and reproductive success in eastern bluebirds. We found a strong tendency toward assortative mating throughout the field site. In areas of high interspecific competition, pairs that behaved the most similarly and displayed either extremely aggressive or extremely non-aggressive phenotypes experienced higher reproductive success. Our data suggest that interspecific competition with tree swallows may select for bluebirds that express similar behavior to that of their mate. Furthermore, animal personality may be an important factor influencing the outcome of interactions between native and aggressive, invasive species.

Highlights

  • Quantifying consistent individual differences in behavior across different spatial and temporal contexts [1,2] may be important to understanding how ecological and evolutionary forces shape populations, communities, and ecosystems [3]

  • The overall analysis of variance (ANOVA) revealed a significant effect of zone on tree swallow density and Fisher’s LSD post-hoc tests revealed that zones 2 and 3 had significantly lower tree swallow densities compared to zones 1, 4, and 5

  • Bluebird nestlings appear to suffer from competitive interactions with tree swallows because, at highcompetition sites, nestlings are smaller at fledging age

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Quantifying consistent individual differences in behavior across different spatial and temporal contexts [1,2] may be important to understanding how ecological and evolutionary forces shape populations, communities, and ecosystems [3]. Interspecific competition has implications for community and population structure [5], character displacement [5], settlement patterns [6], and invasiveness or susceptibility to invasions [7], while individual behavior influences reproductive output and survivorship [8,9,10,11,12]. One exception is Webster et al.’s [5] study of two species of sticklebacks (Gasterosteus sp.), which demonstrated that individual boldness affects the outcome of interspecific competition for resources. Rosvall [20] and Cain & Ketterson [30] found that more aggressive individuals are more competitive and have higher reproductive success

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call