Ecological and social factors affecting the occurrence of kleptoparasitism in two recently established sympatric breeding falcons

IF 1.9 2区 生物学 Q3 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Alessandro Berlusconi, Davide Scridel, Luca Eberle, Alessio Martinoli, Gaia Bazzi, Giacomo Assandri, Nunzio Grattini, Damiano Preatoni, Jacopo G. Cecere, Adriano Martinoli, Diego Rubolini, Michelangelo Morganti
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Abstract

Co-occurrence of ecologically similar species can lead to direct agonistic interactions, including kleptoparasitism, where one individual consumes trophic resources acquired by another. We documented facultative kleptoparasitism in two similarly-sized raptors, the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) and the red-footed falcon (Falco vespertinus). These two species currently co-occur in Northern Italy due to recent range shifts influenced by climate and land-use changes. Multi-year focal observations revealed that single or multiple red-footed falcons were associated with 72% of foraging groups of lesser kestrels. Red-footed falcons initiated kleptoparasitic attacks on lesser kestrels in 46% of foraging group observations, with a success rate of 34%. Attacks were more likely when the prey capture rate (i.e. a proxy of foraging efficiency) of lesser kestrels was high. Red-footed falcons were more successful in stealing prey when the food items carried by lesser kestrels were larger, and kleptoparasitic attacks by groups of red-footed falcons had a higher success rate than attacks by singletons. Overall, we propose that such frequent kleptoparasitic events, which have never been previously documented in these two species, may have emerged as a consequence of their recently established co-occurrence. Kleptoparasitism could reduce the foraging efficiency and fitness of lesser kestrels, potentially leading to broader ecological consequences, such as population declines or range shifts. These findings highlight how species redistributions associated with global changes may lead to novel interspecific interactions with unforeseen ecological implications.

Abstract Image

影响两只新近建立的同域繁殖猎鹰发生偷盗寄生行为的生态和社会因素
生态上相似物种的共存会导致直接的敌我互动,包括偷食,即一个个体消耗另一个个体获得的营养资源。我们在两种体型相似的猛禽--小隼(Falco naumanni)和红脚隼(Falco vespertinus)--身上发现了隐性偷食现象。由于近期受气候和土地使用变化的影响,这两个物种目前共同生活在意大利北部。多年的重点观察表明,72%的小红隼觅食群与单只或多只红脚隼有关。在46%的觅食群体观察中,红脚隼对小红隼发起了偷寄生攻击,成功率为34%。当小红隼的猎物捕获率(即觅食效率的代表)较高时,攻击的可能性更大。当小红隼携带的食物体积较大时,红脚隼偷食猎物的成功率更高,红脚隼群体偷食寄生攻击的成功率要高于单只红脚隼的攻击。总之,我们认为,这两个物种以前从未发生过如此频繁的偷寄生事件,这可能是它们最近共同出现的结果。爬虫寄生可能会降低小红隼的觅食效率和适应能力,从而可能导致更广泛的生态后果,如种群减少或分布区转移。这些发现突显了与全球变化相关的物种重新分布如何可能导致新的种间相互作用,从而产生不可预见的生态影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
8.70%
发文量
146
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The journal publishes reviews, original contributions and commentaries dealing with quantitative empirical and theoretical studies in the analysis of animal behavior at the level of the individual, group, population, community, and species.
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