Abstract
The food niche partitioning of four species of house snakes (Lamprophis fuliginosus, L. olivaceus, L. lineatus, and L. virgatus) was studied in suburban areas of south‐eastern Nigeria, West Africa. Snakes were captured in the field, and their stomach contents were obtained by forced‐squeezing of the ingested bolus. Pseudo‐community analysis and Monte Carlo simulations, by two different algorithms, were used to investigate whether the community under study was randomly assembled along the trophic niche axis. Four hundred and thirty snake individuals were captured: 52 out of 133 L. fuliginosus (32.1%), 31 of 126 (24.6%) L. lineatus, 30 of 108 (27.8%) L. virgatus, and 20 of 63 (31.7%) L. olivaceus had identifiable food contents in the stomach. Lamprophis fuliginosus appeared as the more generalist species, L. lineatus showed some preference for lizards and frogs, L. virgatus for small mammals (rodents and shrews), and L. olivaceus for nestling birds and small mammals. However, null models showed that the community organization was random along the food niche axis by both the randomization algorithms used in this paper. Thus, we concluded that these four snake species do not partition either the quality or the number of the available resources.
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