Ecological theory predicts that animals with similar foraging strategies should not be able to coexist without segregating either in space, time or diet. In communities, intra-specific competition is thought to be more intense than the competition among species, because of the lack of niche partitioning between conspecifics. Hence, while different seabird species can overlap in their foraging distribution, intra-specific competition can drive the neighboring populations of the same species to spatial segregation of foraging areas. To investigate ecological segregation within and among species of diving seabirds, we used a multispecies GPS-tracking approach of seabirds of four species on a small island in the Southwest Atlantic. The present ...
When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they utilize thos...
Sexual competition is increasingly recognized as an important selective pressure driving species dis...
Individuals can specialise such that mutually exclusive home ranges arise and the acquisition of sit...
The principle of competitive exclusion postulates that ecologically-similar species are expected to ...
Central-place foraging in large seabird colonies leads to high levels of intra-specific competition ...
How do seabirds deal with intra-specific competition for food? We addressed this question in a study...
International audienceWhen species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the...
Background: Social interactions, reproductive demands and intrinsic constraints all influence foragi...
The principle of competitive exclusion postulates that ecologically-similar species are expected to ...
Reducing resource competition is a crucial requirement for colonial seabirds to ensure adequate self...
To mediate competition, similar sympatric species are assumed to use different resources, or the sam...
The role that population-level competition plays in regulating foraging distributions of colonial br...
Aim: Understanding the mechanisms that allow the coexistence of species is key to preserve full ecos...
Morphologically similar sympatric species reduce competition by partitioning resources, for example ...
When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they utilize thos...
When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they utilize thos...
Sexual competition is increasingly recognized as an important selective pressure driving species dis...
Individuals can specialise such that mutually exclusive home ranges arise and the acquisition of sit...
The principle of competitive exclusion postulates that ecologically-similar species are expected to ...
Central-place foraging in large seabird colonies leads to high levels of intra-specific competition ...
How do seabirds deal with intra-specific competition for food? We addressed this question in a study...
International audienceWhen species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the...
Background: Social interactions, reproductive demands and intrinsic constraints all influence foragi...
The principle of competitive exclusion postulates that ecologically-similar species are expected to ...
Reducing resource competition is a crucial requirement for colonial seabirds to ensure adequate self...
To mediate competition, similar sympatric species are assumed to use different resources, or the sam...
The role that population-level competition plays in regulating foraging distributions of colonial br...
Aim: Understanding the mechanisms that allow the coexistence of species is key to preserve full ecos...
Morphologically similar sympatric species reduce competition by partitioning resources, for example ...
When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they utilize thos...
When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they utilize thos...
Sexual competition is increasingly recognized as an important selective pressure driving species dis...
Individuals can specialise such that mutually exclusive home ranges arise and the acquisition of sit...