Abstract

Eastern Red-backed Salamanders are colour polymorphic and have become a model system for examining ecological separation and the mechanisms for potential divergence in sympatry. Morphs of this species are differentiated along several niche axes including temperature optima, territorial behaviour, and response to predators. We were interested in whether temporal variation in ecological conditions would affect foraging behavior and ultimately diet. The goal of our study was to compare the diets of striped and unstripedP. cinereusover a range of seasonal conditions to better understand if the reported differences observed in the fall season at our field site remain consistent through the active season of this species. Diet differences between the two morphs were greatest during spring and fall when salamanders are most abundant at the surface. These diet differences were driven largely by two prey categories. In the spring, striped salamanders ate more oribatid mites and in the fall they consumed more entomobryomorph Collembola. Trade-offs associated with territory acquisition coupled with physiological and morphological differences may explain the observed seasonal niche partitioning related to the diet in this population.

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