Altshuler Douglas L
Bioengineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA.
Am Nat. 2006 Feb;167(2):216-29. doi: 10.1086/498622. Epub 2005 Dec 12.
Hummingbirds, with their impressive flight ability and competitive aerial contests, make ideal candidates for applying a mechanistic approach to studying community structure. Because flight costs are influenced by abiotic factors that change systematically with altitude, elevational gradients provide natural experiments for hummingbird flight ecology. Prior attempts relied on wing disc loading (WDL) as a morphological surrogate for flight performance, but recent analyses indicate this variable does not influence either territorial behavior or competitive ability. Aerodynamic power, by contrast, can be derived from direct measurements of performance and, like WDL, declines across elevations. Here, I demonstrate for a diverse community of Andean hummingbirds that burst aerodynamic power is associated with territorial behavior. Along a second elevational gradient in Colorado, I tested for correlated changes in aerodynamic power and competitive ability in two territorial hummingbirds. This behavioral analysis revealed that short-winged Selasphorus rufus males are dominant over long-winged Selasphorus platycercus males at low elevations but that the roles are reversed at higher elevations. Several lines of evidence support the hypothesis that the burst rather than sustained aerodynamic performance mediates competitive ability at high elevation. A minimum value for burst power may be required for successful competition, but other maneuverability features gain importance when all competitors have sufficient muscle power, as occurs at low elevations.
蜂鸟凭借其令人印象深刻的飞行能力和激烈的空中竞争,成为应用机械方法研究群落结构的理想对象。由于飞行成本受随海拔高度系统性变化的非生物因素影响,海拔梯度为蜂鸟飞行生态学提供了自然实验。先前的研究尝试依赖翼盘载荷(WDL)作为飞行性能的形态学替代指标,但最近的分析表明,该变量对领地行为或竞争能力均无影响。相比之下,空气动力功率可通过对性能的直接测量得出,并且与WDL一样,会随着海拔升高而下降。在此,我证明对于一个多样化的安第斯蜂鸟群落而言,爆发性空气动力功率与领地行为相关。在科罗拉多的第二个海拔梯度上,我测试了两种领地性蜂鸟的空气动力功率和竞争能力的相关变化。这一行为分析表明,短翅的鲁氏蜂鸟雄性在低海拔地区比长翅的宽尾蜂鸟雄性占优势,但在高海拔地区角色则相反。多条证据支持这样的假设,即在高海拔地区,爆发性而非持续性的空气动力性能介导了竞争能力。成功竞争可能需要爆发功率的最小值,但当所有竞争者都有足够的肌肉力量时,如在低海拔地区的情况,其他机动性特征则变得更为重要。