4.5 Article

Effects of intraspecific competition and body mass on diet specialization in a mammalian scavenger

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8338

Keywords

body mass influence; competition; diet; foraging; scavenger; scavenging theory; specialization; stable isotopes

Funding

  1. Winnifred Scott Foundation [RG161707]

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Animals that rely on scavenging need to exploit patchy resources and face competition. The Tasmanian devil, a scavenging mammalian species, shows dietary specialization even though it has a varied diet as a species. Larger individuals tend to be trophic specialists, and heavier ones show a greater degree of specialization, possibly because mass plays a role in diet choice and trophic specialization is an efficient foraging strategy.
Animals that rely extensively on scavenging rather than hunting must exploit resources that are inherently patchy, dangerous, or subject to competition. Though it may be expected that scavengers should therefore form opportunistic feeding habits in order to survive, a broad species diet may mask specialization occurring at an individual level. To test this, we used stable isotope analysis to analyze the degree of specialization in the diet of the Tasmanian devil, one of few mammalian species to develop adaptations for scavenging. We found that the majority of individuals were dietary specialists, indicating that they fed within a narrow trophic niche despite their varied diet as a species. Even in competitive populations, only small individuals could be classified as true trophic generalists; larger animals in those populations were trophic specialists. In populations with reduced levels of competition, all individuals were capable of being trophic specialists. Heavier individuals showed a greater degree of trophic specialization, suggesting either that mass is an important driver of diet choice or that trophic specialization is an efficient foraging strategy allowing greater mass gain. Devils may be unique among scavenging mammals in the extent to which they can specialize their diets, having been released from the competitive pressure of larger carnivores.

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