The competitive exclusion–tolerance rule explains habitat partitioning among co-occurring species of burying beetles

IF 4.4 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecology Pub Date : 2023-11-10 DOI:10.1002/ecy.4208
Kevin W. Burke, Adam F. Groulx, Paul R. Martin
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Abstract

Habitat partitioning among co-occurring, ecologically similar species is widespread in nature and thought to be an important mechanism for coexistence. The factors that cause habitat partitioning, however, are unknown for most species. We experimentally tested among three alternative hypotheses to explain habitat partitioning among two species of co-occurring burying beetle (Nicrophorus) that occupy forest (Nicrophorus orbicollis) and wetland (Nicrophorus hebes) habitats. Captive experiments revealed that the larger N. orbicollis (forest) was consistently dominant to N. hebes (wetland) in competitive interactions for carcasses that they require for reproduction. Transplant enclosure experiments in nature revealed that N. hebes had poor reproductive success whenever the dominant N. orbicollis was present. In the absence of N. orbicollis, N. hebes performed as well, or better, in forest versus its typical wetland habitat. In contrast, N. orbicollis performed poorly in wetlands regardless of the presence of N. hebes. These results support the competitive exclusion–tolerance rule where the competitively dominant N. orbicollis excludes the subordinate N. hebes from otherwise suitable or preferable forest habitat, while the subordinate N. hebes is uniquely able to tolerate the challenges of breeding in wetlands. Transplant experiments further showed that carcass burial depth—an important trait thought to enhance the competitive ability of the dominant N. orbicollis—is costly in wetland habitats. In the presence of N. hebes, N. orbicollis buried carcasses deeper; deeper burial is thought to provide a competitive advantage in forests but further compromised the reproductive success of N. orbicollis in wetlands. Overall, results provide evidence that the competitive exclusion–tolerance rule underlies habitat partitioning among ecologically similar species and that the traits important for competitive dominance in relatively benign environments are costly in more challenging environments, consistent with a trade-off.

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竞争排斥-容忍规则解释了埋葬甲虫共存物种之间的栖息地划分。
共存、生态相似物种之间的栖息地划分在自然界中广泛存在,被认为是共存的重要机制。然而,造成栖息地划分的因素对大多数物种来说都是未知的。我们在三种替代假设中进行了实验测试,以解释两种共存的埋葬甲虫(Nicrophorus)的栖息地划分,这两种甲虫占据了森林(N.orbicollis)和湿地(N.hebes)的栖息地。圈养实验表明,在繁殖所需的尸体的竞争性相互作用中,较大的圆颈猪笼草(森林)始终占赫比斯猪笼草的主导地位。在自然界中进行的移植围栏实验表明,只要有优势的圆颈猪笼草存在,赫氏猪笼草的繁殖成功率就很低。在没有圆颈猪笼草的情况下,海贝猪笼草在森林中的表现与其典型的湿地栖息地一样好,甚至更好。相比之下,无论赫比斯猪笼草的存在如何,圆颈猪笼草在湿地中的表现都很差。这些结果支持了竞争排斥-容忍规则,即竞争优势的圆颈猪笼草将次级猪笼草排除在其他合适或优选的森林栖息地之外,而次级猪笼菜能够独特地容忍湿地繁殖的挑战。移植实验进一步表明,尸体的埋深在湿地栖息地是昂贵的,这是一个重要的特征,被认为可以增强优势的圆颈猪笼草的竞争能力。当赫比斯猪笼草在场时,orbicollis猪笼草将尸体埋得更深;深埋被认为在森林中提供了竞争优势,但进一步影响了圆颈猪笼草在湿地中的繁殖成功。总的来说,研究结果提供了证据,证明竞争排斥容忍规则是生态相似物种之间栖息地划分的基础,并且在相对良性的环境中,对竞争优势至关重要的特征在更具挑战性的环境中代价高昂,这与权衡一致。这篇文章受版权保护。保留所有权利。
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来源期刊
Ecology
Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
2.10%
发文量
332
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ecology publishes articles that report on the basic elements of ecological research. Emphasis is placed on concise, clear articles documenting important ecological phenomena. The journal publishes a broad array of research that includes a rapidly expanding envelope of subject matter, techniques, approaches, and concepts: paleoecology through present-day phenomena; evolutionary, population, physiological, community, and ecosystem ecology, as well as biogeochemistry; inclusive of descriptive, comparative, experimental, mathematical, statistical, and interdisciplinary approaches.
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