热带混合种群对候鸟在树荫下种植咖啡的重要性:一起觅食的意义

Pub Date : 2021-09-05 DOI:10.1111/jofo.12379
Jenny Munoz Z., Gabriel J. Colorado Z.
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引用次数: 3

摘要

群体生活是一种广泛存在的社会策略,它允许动物在降低捕食风险、增强觅食能力和增加竞争之间进行动态权衡,从而优化觅食。跨越陆地栖息地的鸟类形成了混合物种的鸟群,在那里,数十种留鸟和候鸟全天在一起觅食。对于候鸟和留鸟的觅食行为,特别是在热带地区,人们对鸟群参与和群体大小的影响知之甚少。2011年,通过对哥伦比亚安第斯山脉遮荫咖啡种植园中4种新热带候鸟和3种留鸟觅食生态学的观察,研究了群体参与对其觅食生态学的影响。我们发现,与单独的个体相比,混合种群中的留鸟和候鸟大量增加了觅食尝试的次数,扩展了它们的觅食技能,并且在使用觅食机动方面表现出更大的重叠。研究发现,群体大小对觅食率有一定的影响,摄食次数呈单调增加或呈驼峰状增加,移动率随群体多样性的增加而增加。这些结果支持了群体参与提高觅食成功率和降低感知捕食风险的观点,但也显示了群体物种之间的生态位趋同,以及随着群体规模的增加,更高的移动率和更多的激动相互作用。最后,我们的研究结果揭示了混合物种群对保护鸟类的重要性,包括蓝莺(Setophaga cerulea),一种新热带候鸟,在其越冬区域高度限制觅食。
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Importance of tropical mixed-species flocks for migratory birds in shade-grown coffee: implications of foraging together

Group living is a widespread social strategy that allows animals to optimize foraging with dynamic trade-offs between reduced predation risk, enhanced foraging, and increased competition. Birds across terrestrial habitats form mixed-species flocks, where dozens of resident and migratory species forage together throughout the day. The effect of flock participation and group size on the foraging behavior of migratory and resident species is poorly known, particularly in the tropics. Using foraging observations, we examined the effects of flock participation on the foraging ecology of four species of Neotropical migrants and three resident species in shade-grown coffee plantations in the Colombian Andes in 2011. We showed that resident and migrant birds in mixed-species flocks largely increased the number of foraging attempts, expanded their foraging repertoire, and exhibited greater overlap in use of foraging maneuvers compared with solitary individuals. We found an effect of group size on foraging rate, with feeding attempts increasing monotonically or showing a hump-shaped pattern, and also found that movement rates increased with increasing flock diversity. These results support the idea that flock participation enhances foraging success and reduces perceived predation risk, but also show niche convergence among flocking species, along with higher movement rates and more agonistic interactions as group size increases. Finally, our results provide insight into the importance of mixed-species flocks for birds of conservation concern, including Cerulean Warblers (Setophaga cerulea), a Neotropical migrant shown to be highly restricted to foraging in flocks in their wintering areas.

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