Tédonzong Luc Roscelin Dongmo, Willie Jacob, Tagg Nikki, Tchamba Martin N, Angwafo Tsi Evaristus, Keuko Ada Myriane Patipe, Kuenbou Jacques Keumo, Petre Charles-Albert, Lens Luc
Projet Grands Singes (PGS), Cameroun, Centre for Research and Conservation (CRC) Royal Zoological Society of Antwerpen (RZSA) Antwerpen Belgium.
Terrestrial Ecology Unit (TEREC), Department of Biology Ghent University (UGent) Ghent Belgium.
Ecol Evol. 2019 Apr 1;9(8):4473-4494. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5017. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Understanding the mechanisms governing the coexistence of organisms is an important question in ecology, and providing potential solutions contributes to conservation science. In this study, we evaluated the contribution of several mechanisms to the coexistence of two sympatric frugivores, using western lowland gorillas () and central chimpanzees () in a tropical rainforest of southeast Cameroon as a model system. We collected great ape fecal samples to determine and classify fruit species consumed; we conducted great ape nest surveys to evaluate seasonal patterns of habitat use; and we collected botanical data to investigate the distribution of plant species across habitat types in relation to their "consumption traits" (which indicate whether plants are preferred or fallback for either gorilla, chimpanzee, or both). We found that patterns of habitat use varied seasonally for both gorillas and chimpanzees and that gorilla and chimpanzee preferred and fallback fruits differed. Also, the distribution of plant consumption traits was influenced by habitat type and matched accordingly with the patterns of habitat use by gorillas and chimpanzees. We show that neither habitat selection nor fruit preference alone can explain the coexistence of gorillas and chimpanzees, but that considering together the distribution of plant consumption traits of fruiting woody plants across habitats as well as the pattern of fruit availability may contribute to explaining coexistence. This supports the assumptions of niche theory with dominant and subordinate species in heterogeneous landscapes, whereby a species may prefer nesting in habitats where it is less subject to competitive exclusion and where food availability is higher. To our knowledge, our study is the first to investigate the contribution of plant consumption traits, seasonality, and habitat heterogeneity to enabling the coexistence of two sympatric frugivores.
This article has earned an Open Data Badge for making publicly available the digitally-shareable data necessary to reproduce the reported results. The data is available at https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.ms65f29.
理解生物共存的机制是生态学中的一个重要问题,而提供潜在解决方案有助于保护科学。在本研究中,我们以喀麦隆东南部热带雨林中的西部低地大猩猩(Gorilla gorilla gorilla)和黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes troglodytes)为模型系统,评估了几种机制对两种同域果食动物共存的贡献。我们收集了大猩猩粪便样本以确定并分类所食用的水果种类;进行了大猩猩巢穴调查以评估栖息地使用的季节性模式;并收集了植物学数据以研究植物物种在不同栖息地类型中的分布与其“消费特征”(表明植物是大猩猩、黑猩猩或两者的偏好果实还是替代果实)之间的关系。我们发现,大猩猩和黑猩猩的栖息地使用模式都随季节变化,且大猩猩和黑猩猩的偏好果实和替代果实有所不同。此外,植物消费特征的分布受栖息地类型影响,并与大猩猩和黑猩猩的栖息地使用模式相应匹配。我们表明,单独的栖息地选择或果实偏好都无法解释大猩猩和黑猩猩的共存,但综合考虑结果木本植物在不同栖息地的植物消费特征分布以及果实可获得性模式可能有助于解释共存现象。这支持了生态位理论中关于异质景观中优势种和从属种的假设,即一个物种可能更倾向于在竞争排斥较小且食物可获得性较高的栖息地筑巢。据我们所知,我们的研究是首次调查植物消费特征、季节性和栖息地异质性对两种同域果食动物共存的贡献。
本文因公开提供了重现报告结果所需的可数字共享数据而获得开放数据徽章。数据可在https://datadryad.org/resource/doi:10.5061/dryad.ms65f29获取。