On the advantage of being different: Nest predation and the coexistence of bird species
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 85 (7) , 2196-2199
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.85.7.2196
Abstract
A long-standing debate in ecology centers on identifying the processes that determine which species coexist in a local community. Partitioning of resources, where species differ in resource use, is often thought to reflect the primary role of competition in determining coexistence of species. However, in theory predation can favor similar patterns. This theory premises that predators increase their search intensity with increasing density of prey. One set of experiments reported here supports this premise based on predators that search for bird nests. A second set of experiments documents that predation rates are lower when nest sites are partitioned among different sites than when the same number of nests are placed in similar sites. Moreover, predation rates on experimental nests are more similar to rates on real nests when experimental nests are partitioned among different sites. These results provide support for a hypothesis that nest predation is a process that can favor coexistence of bird species that partition resources, where nest sites are the resources.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of Lizards on Spider Populations: Manipulative Reconstruction of a Natural ExperimentScience, 1987
- Community Diversity: Relative Roles of Local and Regional ProcessesScience, 1987
- Memory Constraints and Flower Choice in Pieris rapaeScience, 1986
- Nest Predation in Forest Tracts and the Decline of Migratory SongbirdsEcology, 1985
- Control of arthropod abundance by Anolis lizards on St. Eustatius (Neth. Antilles)Oecologia, 1984
- Spatial Heterogeneity, Indirect Interactions, and the Coexistence of Prey SpeciesThe American Naturalist, 1984
- Field Experiments on Interspecific CompetitionThe American Naturalist, 1983
- Predation, apparent competition, and the structure of prey communitiesTheoretical Population Biology, 1977
- Resource Partitioning in Ecological CommunitiesScience, 1974
- An analysis of nesting mortality in birdsSmithsonian Contributions to Zoology, 1969