麦克阿瑟(1958)理论的扩展与局限:对新大陆林莺(林莺科)竞争与食性的生态学和进化研究综述

T. Sherry, C. Kent
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引用次数: 2

摘要

种间竞争在多大程度上构成了物种间的相互作用和群落内的共存,以及相关的机制仍然存在争议。我们关注新大陆林莺(Parulidae),从Robert MacArthur 1958年的标志性论文开始,他在论文中展示了微妙的觅食行为,据称与饮食差异有关,如何在云杉树内促进5种云杉林莺的共存。麦克阿瑟创造了“资源分割”一词,并以各种方式深刻影响了随后几十年的生态学领域。为了理解麦克阿瑟的正确和错误,我们回顾了生态学和进化的方法来解决饮食背景下竞争物种的起源和共存问题。我们认为,一个重要的、未被充分认识的竞争机制是共存的候鸟物种之间的竞争,特别是在冬季,分散开发竞争,部分基于我们自己对莺的饮食与觅食行为、基质使用、鸟类形态和其他特征的研究。我们对林莺种间竞争和共存的综述和综合具有重要的意义,包括我们对鸟类资源分配的重要性和有效性的质疑。我们还提出了一个新的假设,解释了今天在加勒比和其他栖息地莺的成功,从它们相对较近的适应性辐射和加勒比岛屿上的生态机会开始。
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Extensions and limitations of MacArthur (1958): A review of ecological and evolutionary approaches to competition and diet in the New World wood warblers (Parulidae)
The extent to which interspecific competition structures species interactions and coexistence within communities, and the relevant mechanisms, are still debated. We focus on New World wood warblers (Parulidae), beginning with Robert MacArthur’s iconic 1958 paper in which he shows how subtle foraging behaviors, purportedly linked to dietary differences, within spruce trees contribute to the coexistence of 5 spruce-woods warbler species. MacArthur coined the phrase “resource partitioning”, and profoundly impacted the field of Ecology for subsequent decades in diverse ways. To understand what MacArthur got right and what he missed, we reviewed both ecological and evolutionary approaches to questions of the origin and coexistence of competing species in the context of diet. We argue that an important, underappreciated, mechanism of competition among coexisting migratory warbler species, particularly in winter, is diffuse exploitation competition, based in part on our own studies of warbler diets in relation to foraging behavior, substrate use, bird morphology, and other traits. Our review and synthesis of interspecific competition and coexistence in warblers have important consequences, including our questioning of the importance and effectiveness of resource partitioning in birds. We also suggest a novel hypothesis for the success of warblers today in the Caribbean and other habitats, beginning with their relatively recent adaptive radiation and the ecological opportunity on Caribbean islands.
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