4.0 Article

USING FORAGING ECOLOGY TO ELUCIDATE THE ROLE OF SPECIES INTERACTIONS IN TWO CONTRASTING MIXED-SPECIES FLOCK SYSTEMS IN NORTHEASTERN PERU

Journal

WILSON JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY
Volume 128, Issue 2, Pages 378-390

Publisher

WILSON ORNITHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1676/wils-128-02-378-390.1

Keywords

foraging behavior; mixed-species flocks; species interactions

Categories

Funding

  1. Sigma XI
  2. National Science Foundation (Southeast Alliance Graduate Education Fellowship)
  3. Florida Museum of Natural History (Katherine Ordway Endowment)
  4. National Science Foundation Post-Doctoral Fellowship [PRFB 1309320]
  5. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [1309320] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Mixed-species flocks are formed on the basis of both positive and negative species interactions. We use foraging behavior in two different flock types to interpret the extent to which core species minimize niche overlap to reflect negative interactions. We also use the foraging behavior of alarm-calling species to infer whether their behavior is consistent with predictions for species that accrue benefits by associating with other flocking species. The foraging patterns of core species in tierra firme flocks show large differences with respect to foraging maneuvers and substrates, a finding that is consistent with niche theory. In igapo (a blackwater seasonally inundated forest), only the alarm-calling species show differences in foraging patterns among core flock members. We also show that alarm-calling species in different sites show different patterns of association with other flocking species: one species, Thamnomanes saturninus, shows no strong tendency to associate with any other species in the flock and the other, Thamnomanes schistogynus, perches close to and immediately below other species in the flock. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that alarm-callers benefit from insects flushed from other flock members in igapo forest but not in tierra firme forest. In northeastern Peru, subtle variation in the foraging behaviors among alarm-calling species in tierra firme and igapo flocks may reflect differences in species interactions among key flock members.

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