DNA元条形码揭示了在有火的森林中啄木鸟的广泛饮食

Andrew N. Stillman, M. V. Caiafa, Teresa J. Lorenz, M. Jusino, M. Tingley
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引用次数: 5

摘要

生态干扰是影响粮食可得性时空格局的重要因素。在北美西部的森林中,火灾的干扰会导致与枯木相关的节肢动物的资源脉动,这些节肢动物为啄木鸟提供了重要的猎物。尽管不同种类的啄木鸟的觅食策略经常表现出明显的差异,但人们对啄木鸟在受干扰地区利用和分配猎物的方式知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们采用DNA元条形码技术对美国华盛顿州和加利福尼亚州的4种啄木鸟——黑背啄木鸟(Picoides arcticus)、毛啄木鸟(Dryobates villosus)、北翅啄木鸟(Colaptes auratus)和白头啄木鸟(Dryobates albolarvatus)——的节肢动物食性进行了表征和比较,主要使用了火灾后1-13年烧毁森林的雏鸟粪便样本。从78个样本中成功测序发现,存在超过600个操作分类单位(otu),跨越32个节肢动物目。尤其是两种雏鸟的饮食——北方闪烁鸟和黑背啄木鸟——被证明比以前的观察研究表明的要广泛得多。北闪鸡雏鸟的食性多样性显著高于其他局灶种,且在多样性上存在一定的重叠。蛀木甲虫是黑背啄木鸟、毛头啄木鸟和白头啄木鸟特别重要的食物,它们在火灾后会在死亡和垂死的树木上定居。不同物种的日粮组成存在差异,新林(≤5年)和老林(>5年)的日粮差异有限。我们的研究结果显示了饮食资源分配的混合证据,四种焦点物种中有三种表现出相对较高的饮食重叠,这可能是由于燃烧森林中与枯木相关的节肢动物的脉冲补贴。啄木鸟经常被用作森林健康的管理指示物种,我们的研究提供了DNA元条形码的第一个应用,以建立更完整的啄木鸟饮食图谱。
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DNA metabarcoding reveals broad woodpecker diets in fire-maintained forests
Ecological disturbance is a key agent shaping the spatial and temporal landscape of food availability. In forests of western North America, disturbance from fire can lead to resource pulses of deadwood-associated arthropods that provide important prey for woodpeckers. Although the foraging strategies among woodpecker species often demonstrate pronounced differences, little is known about the ways in which woodpeckers exploit and partition prey in disturbed areas. In this study, we employed DNA metabarcoding to characterize and compare the arthropod diets of 4 woodpecker species in Washington and California, USA—Black-backed Woodpecker (Picoides arcticus), Hairy Woodpecker (Dryobates villosus), Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus), and White-headed Woodpecker (Dryobates albolarvatus)—primarily using nestling fecal samples from burned forests 1–13 years postfire. Successful sequencing from 78 samples revealed the presence of over 600 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) spanning 32 arthropod orders. The nestling diets of two species in particular—Northern Flicker and Black-backed Woodpecker—proved to be much broader than previous observational studies suggest. Northern Flicker nestlings demonstrated significantly higher diet diversity compared to other focal species, all of which displayed considerable overlap in diversity. Wood-boring beetles, which colonize dead and dying trees after fire, were particularly important diet items for Black-backed, Hairy, and White-headed woodpeckers. Diet composition differed among species, and diets showed limited differences between newer (≤5 yr) and older (>5 yr) postfire forests. Our results show mixed evidence for dietary resource partitioning, with three of the four focal species exhibiting relatively high diet overlap, perhaps due to the pulsed subsidy of deadwood-associated arthropods in burned forests. Woodpeckers are frequently used as management indicator species for forest health, and our study provides one of the first applications of DNA metabarcoding to build a more complete picture of woodpecker diets.
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