4.1 Article

Altitudinal segregation between Ural Owl Strix uralensis and Tawny Owl S-aluco:: evidence for competitive exclusion in raptorial birds

Journal

BIRD STUDY
Volume 51, Issue -, Pages 264-269

Publisher

BRITISH TRUST ORNITHOLOGY
DOI: 10.1080/00063650409461362

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Capsule: The Owls were significantly segregated in space with the most important factor being altitude. Aims: To establish if the segregation between Ural and Tawny Owl on the level of habitat selection is due to different habitat requirements of the species or a consequence of competitive exclusion. Methods: Seven variables were recorded for habitat of Ural Owls, Tawny Owls that live in sympatry with Ural Owls and Tawny Owls that live in allopatry with Ural Owls. Data were gathered in five mountain areas covered with similar continuous montane forest inside and outside known Ural Owl distribution in Slovenia. Owl territories were surveyed in 2001 using playback method. Evidence for segregation was searched for using discriminant function analysis. Results: The altitudinal distribution of Tawny Owls sympatric to Ural Owls was restricted to low elevations with Ural Owls at high elevations. Where Ural Owls were absent, Tawny Owls widened the altitudinal part of their ecological niche to the mountaintop. Conclusion: Segregation between Tawny and Ural Owls is due to competitive exclusion, with the less competitive Tawny Owl being out-competed by the superior Ural Owl. The forests at foothills are influenced by human presence and therefore avoided by Ural Owls. In areas where both species live in sympatry, these areas act as refugia for Tawny Owls.

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