Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
The Nature Conservancy, Ventura, CA 93001, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2022 Oct 29;62(4):998-1011. doi: 10.1093/icb/icac113.
Animals vary considerably in the amount of behavioral plasticity they exhibit in daily activity timing and temporal niche switching. It is not well understood how environmental factors drive changes in temporal activity or how interspecific differences in the plasticity of activity timing ultimately manifest in free-living animals. Here, we investigated the temporal structure and organization of activity patterns of two insular mammalian carnivores living in sympatry, the island fox (Urocyon littoralis) and island spotted skunk (Spilogale gracilis amphiala). Using collar-mounted accelerometers, we assessed the plasticity of behavioral activity rhythms in foxes and skunks by investigating how environmental factors drive the distribution of locomotor activity across the day and year, and subsequently examined the dynamics of temporal niche overlap between the two species. We documented that foxes express phenotypic plasticity in daily activity timing across the year, ranging from nocturnal to diurnal to crepuscular rhythms depending on the individual and time of year. Most notably, foxes increased the proportion of daytime activity as seasonal temperatures decreased. Overall, activity patterns of foxes were consistent with the circadian thermoenergetics hypothesis, which posits that animals that switch their patterns of activity do so to coincide with the most energetically favorable time of day. In contrast to foxes, skunks exhibited little behavioral plasticity, appearing strictly nocturnal across the year. While the duration of skunk activity bouts increased with the duration of night, timing of activity onset and offset extended into daytime hours during summer when the duration of darkness was shortest. Analysis of temporal niche overlap between foxes and skunks suggested that niche overlap was highest during summer and lowest during winter and was dictated primarily by temporal niche switching in foxes, rather than skunks. Collectively, our results highlight how interspecific asymmetries in behavioral plasticity drive dynamic patterns of temporal niche overlap within an island carnivore community.
动物在日常活动时间和时间生态位转换方面表现出的行为可塑性差异很大。人们还不太清楚环境因素如何驱动时间活动的变化,以及行为时间可塑性的种间差异如何最终在自由生活的动物中表现出来。在这里,我们研究了两种在同域生活的岛屿哺乳动物食肉动物的活动模式的时间结构和组织,即岛屿狐(Urocyon littoralis)和岛屿斑点臭鼬(Spilogale gracilis amphiala)。我们使用佩戴在项圈上的加速度计,通过研究环境因素如何驱动运动活动在一天和一年中的分布,来评估狐狸和臭鼬行为活动节律的可塑性,随后检查了这两个物种之间时间生态位重叠的动态。我们记录到,狐狸在一年中的日常活动时间表现出表型可塑性,从夜间到昼间再到黄昏节律,具体取决于个体和一年中的时间。最值得注意的是,随着季节性温度的降低,狐狸增加了白天活动的比例。总的来说,狐狸的活动模式与昼夜节律热能量假说一致,该假说认为,动物改变其活动模式是为了与一天中最具能量优势的时间相吻合。与狐狸相反,臭鼬全年几乎没有表现出行为可塑性,一直是夜行性的。虽然臭鼬的活动持续时间随着夜晚的延长而增加,但在夏季,当黑夜最短时,活动开始和结束的时间会延伸到白天。对狐狸和臭鼬之间时间生态位重叠的分析表明,夏季的生态位重叠最高,冬季最低,这主要是由狐狸的时间生态位转换决定的,而不是臭鼬。总的来说,我们的研究结果强调了种间行为可塑性的不对称性如何在岛屿食肉动物群落内驱动时间生态位重叠的动态模式。