De Ruyck Christopher C, Koper Nicola
Natural Resources Institute University of Manitoba Winnipeg Manitoba Canada.
Ecol Evol. 2025 Jan 16;15(1):e70607. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70607. eCollection 2025 Jan.
Terrestrial bird populations on small, species depauperate islands often experience selection for generalist foraging traits via ecological release; however, it is unclear how island conditions may uniquely influence other life-history characteristics of small-island birds, such as the unusually high rates of molt-breeding overlap exhibited on the island of Grenada. To explore this question, we collected data on the life cycles and diets of 10 commonly occurring Grenadian bird species to assess the degree of generalist foraging and evaluate how seasonal patterns in diet niche breadth and diet overlap among species relates to the high rates of molt-breeding overlap. We evaluated three hypotheses explaining drivers of molt-breeding overlap (constraints on molt rate, unpredictable food abundance, and limited duration of food abundance), and suggest that widespread overlap in small-island tropical communities may be the result of generalist foraging adaptations and restricted time periods of sufficient invertebrate availability for successful breeding and molt to occur. We found that these species typically exhibited low breeding period seasonality followed by synchronized peaks in molt intensity and molt-breeding overlap during peak rainfall and high invertebrate abundance. There was also greater diet overlap and wider niche widths of invertebrate resources in the wet season when molt-breeding overlap occurred, and greater niche partitioning of invertebrate items among species in the dry season suggesting that competitive interactions for invertebrates were stronger in the dry season. Birds also shared more plant food sources in the dry season when invertebrate abundance is low, though seasonal differences in plant diet diversity and niche width varied by species. These results provide evidence that scarce invertebrate resources and competition likely limit productivity and molt/self-maintenance in these island-adapted, species-depauperate communities, and drive high rates of molt-breeding overlap, a relatively uncommon life-history strategy.
在物种匮乏的小岛上,陆生鸟类种群常常通过生态释放经历对广食性觅食特征的选择;然而,尚不清楚岛屿条件如何独特地影响小岛屿鸟类的其他生活史特征,比如格林纳达岛上出现的异常高的换羽与繁殖重叠率。为探究这个问题,我们收集了10种常见的格林纳达鸟类的生命周期和饮食数据,以评估广食性觅食的程度,并评估物种间饮食生态位宽度和饮食重叠的季节性模式如何与高换羽-繁殖重叠率相关。我们评估了三种解释换羽-繁殖重叠驱动因素的假说(换羽速率的限制、不可预测的食物丰度以及食物丰富期的持续时间有限),并提出小岛屿热带群落中广泛存在的重叠可能是广食性觅食适应以及成功繁殖和换羽所需的足够无脊椎动物可利用的受限时间段的结果。我们发现这些物种通常繁殖期季节性较低,随后在降雨高峰期和无脊椎动物丰富时出现换羽强度和换羽-繁殖重叠的同步峰值。在换羽-繁殖重叠发生的雨季,无脊椎动物资源的饮食重叠也更大,生态位宽度更宽,而在旱季,物种间无脊椎动物项目的生态位划分更大,这表明旱季对无脊椎动物的竞争相互作用更强。在无脊椎动物丰度较低的旱季,鸟类也共享更多植物食物来源,不过植物饮食多样性和生态位宽度的季节性差异因物种而异。这些结果提供了证据,表明稀缺的无脊椎动物资源和竞争可能限制了这些适应岛屿、物种匮乏群落的生产力和换羽/自我维持,并导致高换羽-繁殖重叠率,这是一种相对不常见的生活史策略。