The rapidly changing climate in the Arctic is expected to have a major impact on the foraging ecology of seabirds, owing to changes in the distribution and abundance of their prey but also that of competitors (e.g. southerly species expanding their range into the Arctic). Species can respond to interspecific competition by segregating along different niche axes. Here, we studied spatial, temporal and habitat segregation between two closely related seabird species: common guillemot Uria aalge (a temperate species) and Brünnich’s guillemot Uria lomvia (a true Arctic species), at two sympatric sites in Iceland that differ in their total population sizes and the availability of marine habitats. We deployed GPS and temperature-depth recorders to...
Morphologically similar sympatric species reduce competition by partitioning resources, for example ...
1. Ecological niche theory predicts sympatric species to show segregation in their spatio‐temporal h...
Published onlineJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis is the final version of the arti...
Climate change alters species distributions by shifting their fundamental niche in space through tim...
Climate change alters species distributions by shifting their fundamental niche in space through tim...
In colonially breeding marine predators, individual movements and colonial segregation are influence...
<div><p>When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they util...
Aim: Understanding the mechanisms that allow the coexistence of species is key to preserve full ecos...
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...
1.Ecological niche theory predicts sympatric species to show segregation in their spatio‐temporal ha...
Sexual competition is increasingly recognized as an important selective pressure driving species dis...
The principle of competitive exclusion postulates that ecologically-similar species are expected to ...
Understanding the determinants of species’ distributions is a fundamental aim in ecology and a prere...
International audienceNiche theory predicts that to reduce competition for the same resource, sympat...
Morphologically similar sympatric species reduce competition by partitioning resources, for example ...
1. Ecological niche theory predicts sympatric species to show segregation in their spatio‐temporal h...
Published onlineJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis is the final version of the arti...
Climate change alters species distributions by shifting their fundamental niche in space through tim...
Climate change alters species distributions by shifting their fundamental niche in space through tim...
In colonially breeding marine predators, individual movements and colonial segregation are influence...
<div><p>When species competing for the same resources coexist, some segregation in the way they util...
Aim: Understanding the mechanisms that allow the coexistence of species is key to preserve full ecos...
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...
1.Ecological niche theory predicts sympatric species to show segregation in their spatio‐temporal ha...
Sexual competition is increasingly recognized as an important selective pressure driving species dis...
The principle of competitive exclusion postulates that ecologically-similar species are expected to ...
Understanding the determinants of species’ distributions is a fundamental aim in ecology and a prere...
International audienceNiche theory predicts that to reduce competition for the same resource, sympat...
Morphologically similar sympatric species reduce competition by partitioning resources, for example ...
1. Ecological niche theory predicts sympatric species to show segregation in their spatio‐temporal h...
Published onlineJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis is the final version of the arti...