Abstract

Understanding intraspecific phenotypic variation in prey specialisation can help to predict how long-term changes in prey availability affect the viability of these phenotypes and their persistence. Generalists are favoured when the main food resources are unpredictable compared to specialists, which track the availability of the main prey and are more vulnerable to changes in the main food resource. Intraspecific heritable melanin-based colour polymorphism is considered to reflect adaptations to different environments. We studied colour morph-specific diet specialisation in a generalist predator, tawny owl (Strix aluco), during offspring food provisioning in relation to mammal prey density. We hypothesised that the grey morph, with higher fitness than the brown in Northern boreal conditions, is more specialised in mammalian prey than the brown morph, which in turn has higher fitness than the grey in the temperate zone. We found a higher diversity of prey delivered to the nest by brown fathers compared to grey ones, which also depended on the overall mammalian prey availability. Brown fathers provided proportionally fewer mammalian prey than grey in poor, but not in favourable mammal prey years. Our results suggest that the brown morph is more generalistic and reacts more strongly to variations in food supply than the grey morph, which may be a beneficial strategy in an unpredictable environment caused by environmental degradation.Significance statementDiet choice of a species may vary depending on fluctuations in the abundance of their food resource, but also within a population, there can be adaptations to use different food resources. The tawny owl exhibits a grey and a reddish-brown colour morph and is considered a generalist predator eating both mammal and bird prey. We find that the diet of the reddish-brown morph is more diverse than that of the grey. When the tawny owls’ main prey, small mammals, are abundant both colour morphs prey on mammals, but in years with less small mammals, the reddish-brown morph is more prone of switching to small bird predation than the grey. The generalist strategy of the brown morph is likely to be more favourable than a stricter specialisation in small mammals of the grey under recently reoccurring irregularities in small mammal dynamics.

Highlights

  • Diet specialisation and phenotypic variation in food resource use and food requirements dictate the ability of populations and species to respond to changes in food resource availability

  • Evidence is accumulating that colour polymorphism—a phenotypic marker for genetic polymorphism—is associated with morph-specificity in habitat use

  • We found that the diversity of prey delivered by tawny owl males to their nestlings differed depending on their colour morph and prevailing density of their staple food, small mammals

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Summary

Introduction

Diet specialisation and phenotypic variation in food resource use and food requirements dictate the ability of populations and species to respond to changes in food resource availability. Optimal foraging models predict that diet specialisation is determined by the variety and abundance 45 Page 2 of 8. It is predicted that the degree of specialisation is a function of spatial and temporal heterogeneity and predictability in the abundance of resources, cultural experiences and the efficiency of foraging adaptations (Partridge and Green 1985; Sherry 1990; Whitfield 1990; Durell 2000). Specialists, which evolve specific adaptations or breeding strategies, do better when their preferred food resource is abundant, but may face a cost of specialisation if the preferred prey becomes scarce (Terraube et al 2011). Generalists are predicted to be favoured when the main food resources are unpredictable or scarce, whereas specialists adjust their life history to the availability of the main prey and become more vulnerable to unpredictable changes in the main food resource

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