当龟的首选食物稀缺时,猎物转换并不能保护龟免受生物能的影响。

IF 2.2 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Kristen Petrov, Ricky-John Spencer, Natasha Malkiewicz, Jessica Lewis, Claudia Keitel, James U Van Dyke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:最佳觅食理论解释了动物如何根据不同类型食物的可获得性、营养成分和处理时间做出觅食决定。通食动物通过摄取各种类型的食物来解决这个问题,并相对容易地改变它们的饮食习惯。专食动物吃的食物种类很少,如果没有这些食物,它们可能会饿死。我们将稳定同位素分析与之前发表的胃内容物和环境数据相结合,研究了三种同域淡水龟在四块浊度和初级生产者丰度不同的湿地中的觅食生态如何变化:结果:我们发现,当初级生产者丰富且水质清澈时,通性淡水龟(Emydura macquarii)摄食多种食物(但主要是丝状绿藻),但当水质浑浊且初级生产者稀少时,它们会根据最佳觅食理论的预测,转而摄食肉食性食物。相比之下,两种更为专一的肉食性物种--扩张螯虾和长颈螯虾在不同湿地的食性并无差异,在E. macquarii为肉食性的地方,种间竞争可能会加剧。当E. macquarii被迫更多肉食时,空胃率会更高,雌龟的身体状况也会下降,但Chelodina物种都不会受到影响:我们的研究结果为最佳觅食理论提供了支持,但同时也表明,改变食物的能力并不能保护通食者在其偏好的食物稀少时不降低觅食成功率,从而直接影响其能量预算。我们的研究结果具有保护意义,因为墨累-达令河水系的湿地越来越浑浊,大型植被丰度很低,而且所有这三种物种都在减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Prey-switching does not protect a generalist turtle from bioenergetic consequences when its preferred food is scarce.

Prey-switching does not protect a generalist turtle from bioenergetic consequences when its preferred food is scarce.

Prey-switching does not protect a generalist turtle from bioenergetic consequences when its preferred food is scarce.

Prey-switching does not protect a generalist turtle from bioenergetic consequences when its preferred food is scarce.

Background: Optimal foraging theory explains how animals make foraging decisions based on the availability, nutritional content, and handling times of different food types. Generalists solve this problem by consuming a variety of food types, and alter their diets with relative ease. Specialists eat few food types, and may starve if those food types are not available. We integrated stable isotope analyses with previously-published stomach contents and environmental data to investigate how the foraging ecologies of three sympatric freshwater turtle species vary across four wetlands that differ in turbidity and primary producer abundance.

Results: We found that the generalist Emydura macquarii consumes a varied diet (but mostly filamentous green algae) when primary producers are available and water is clear, but switches to a more carnivorous diet when the water is turbid and primary producers are scarce, following the predictions of optimal foraging theory. In contrast, two more-specialized carnivorous species, Chelodina expansa and Chelodina longicollis, do not differ in diet across wetlands, and interspecific competition may increase where E. macquarii is carnivorous. When forced to be more carnivorous, E. macquarii exhibits higher rates of empty stomachs, and female turtles have reduced body condition, but neither Chelodina species are affected.

Conclusions: Our results provide support for optimal foraging theory, but also show that the ability to change diet does not protect the generalist from experiencing lower foraging success when its preferred food is rare, with direct consequences for their energy budgets. Our results have conservation implications because wetlands in the Murray-Darling river system are increasingly turbid and have low macrophyte abundance, and all three species are declining.

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来源期刊
BMC Ecology
BMC Ecology ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
4.50%
发文量
0
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Ecology is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on environmental, behavioral and population ecology as well as biodiversity of plants, animals and microbes.
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