Conspecific density drives sex-specific spatial wintertime distribution and hoarding behaviour of an avian predator

Ornis Fennica Pub Date : 2024-01-28 DOI:10.51812/of.130326
E. Koivisto, G. Masoero, Chiara Morosinotto, Eric Le Tortorec, E. Korpimäki
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Abstract

Most studies on intraspecific competition, i.e., competition among individuals of the same species, have been conducted during the breeding season. Yet, at northern latitudes, intraspecific competition is expected to be particularly strong under the harsh weather conditions of the non-breeding season with limited number of resources available per individual. We studied the food-hoarding behaviour of wintering Eurasian Pygmy Owls (Glaucidium passerinum) along with sex- and age-specific spatial distribution in relation to fluctuating main prey abundance (voles) and conspecific density using a 15-year dataset. In low vole abundance years, increasing conspecific density reduced the total prey number stored by an owl, suggesting high costs of exploitative competition. The distance between the stores of nearest neighbours was greater when both were females, suggesting that the spatial avoidance is driven by sex-specific competition. However, food stores of females had a larger amount of prey items, especially when the nearest neighbour was of the same sex. The number of stores hoarded by an owl increased with increasing conspecific densities. Distributing the prey items to multiple store-sites instead of one (shifting from larder-hoarding towards scatter-hoarding) can help to reduce the overall loss to potential pilfering when conspecific density is high. These results combined suggest that high conspecific density inflames sex-specific interference competition, rather than solely exploitative competition, and in turn drives the observed sex-specific spatial distribution. Adopting a sex-specific spatial distribution according to hoarding and aggressive behaviour can be a way to reduce the severity of intraspecific competition locally and could have cascading effects on the prey community.
同种密度驱动一种鸟类捕食者的性别特异性冬季空间分布和囤积行为
大多数关于种内竞争(即同一物种个体间的竞争)的研究都是在繁殖季节进行的。然而,在北纬地区,非繁殖季节气候条件恶劣,每个个体可利用的资源有限,因此种内竞争预计会特别激烈。我们利用 15 年的数据集研究了越冬欧亚侏儒鸮(Glaucidium passerinum)的觅食行为以及性别和年龄的空间分布与主要猎物丰度(田鼠)和同种动物密度波动的关系。在田鼠丰度较低的年份,同种密度的增加会减少猫头鹰储存的猎物总数,这表明利用竞争的成本很高。当最近的邻居都是雌性时,其食物储存量之间的距离更大,这表明空间回避是由性别特异性竞争驱动的。然而,雌性贮藏的食物中猎物的数量较多,尤其是当最近的邻居是同性时。猫头鹰囤积食物的数量随着同种动物密度的增加而增加。当同种密度较高时,将猎物分配到多个储藏点而不是一个储藏点(从储藏室囤积转向分散囤积)有助于减少潜在偷窃行为造成的总体损失。这些结果表明,高密度的同种生物会加剧性别特异性的干扰竞争,而不仅仅是剥削竞争,进而推动观察到的性别特异性空间分布。根据囤积和攻击行为采用性别特异性空间分布可以降低当地种内竞争的严重程度,并可能对猎物群落产生连带效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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