Abstract

Although ontogeny influences dietary composition and trophic niche breadth in many anurans, its effects on diet have been little analyzed in sympatric species. In this study, we analyzed interspecific and ontogenetic variation in dietary composition and trophic niche width in an anuran community from a semi-arid environment. We found a more profound effect of species identity than body size on dietary composition, with the diet of four species dominated by formicids, that of two others by coleopterans and formicids, and that of the remaining species not dominated by specific prey types. We found ontogenetic changes in dietary composition in three of four species analyzed, in which consumption of some small insects decreased as predator size increased, regardless of species. Additionally, we did not find ontogenetic change in prey number consumed in any of the four species, but prey size increased with increasing predator size in all of them. Most species exhibited a narrow trophic niche, which was even narrower in adults in three of the four species analyzed. Costello’s modified plots revealed a high variation among individuals in termite consumption in Anaxyrus punctatus, and in more prey types in Spea multiplicata. Our results suggest that this community is not size-structured, and that ontogenetic diet shifts are mainly caused by passive sampling toward prey of different sizes. Finally, comparisons with previous data revealed an interpopulation pattern, in which trophic niche width contracts as aridity increases, possibly because of an increase in interspecific competition for trophic resources.

Highlights

  • Anurans exhibit a great variation in dietary composition and trophic niche breadth, with some of them able to select prey to a certain degree (Toft, 1980; Flowers & Graves, 1995; Cogălniceanu, Palmer & Ciubuc, 2000)

  • Lima (1998) found that ontogenetic shifts in dietary composition are pervasive in six species of litter anurans from Central Amazonia, and Whitfield & Donnelly (2006) found that this phenomenon is present in half of the species from La Selva, Costa Rica

  • Dietary composition The diet of all the species was composed entirely or mainly by invertebrates; we found consumption of vertebrates in only three of them: we found much digested feathers, one in each A. punctatus and L. berlandieri, and unidentifiable remains of one postmetamoprhic anuran in an adult S. multiplicata

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Summary

Introduction

Anurans exhibit a great variation in dietary composition and trophic niche breadth, with some of them able to select prey to a certain degree (Toft, 1980; Flowers & Graves, 1995; Cogălniceanu, Palmer & Ciubuc, 2000). In such conditions of sympatry, characteristics of individuals potentially become important determinants of dietary aspects, both within and between species Among these characteristics, it has been found in numerous single-species studies that ontogeny influences both dietary composition (Donnelly, 1991; Lima & Moreira, 1993; Hirai, 2002; Biavati, Wiederhecker & Colli, 2004; Valderrama-Vernaza, Ramírez-Pinilla & SerranoCardozo, 2009) and trophic niche breadth (Christian, 1982; Quiroga, Sanabria & Acosta, 2009; Ngo, Lee & Ngo, 2014). Ontogenetic shifts are relevant for sympatric species, because these can influence the outcome of interspecific interactions (such as competition and predation) and structure of the community (Werner & Gilliam, 1984; Polis, 1991)

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