The two oxpecker species reveal the role of movement rates and foraging intensity in species coexistence.

Biol Lett

Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, Hwange Cluster, Main Camp, Zimbabwe.

Published: October 2019

The two oxpecker species are specialized passerines that forage for ticks and other food particles on the body of ungulates in the African savannahs. One of their intriguing features is their ability to coexist despite sharing the same, specialized diet. Using co-occurrence data (photographs of giraffes with oxpeckers on them) and approximate Bayesian computing, we demonstrate that yellow-billed oxpeckers changed host faster than red-billed oxpeckers and appeared to displace red-billed oxpeckers from preferred giraffe body parts. Conversely, red-billed oxpeckers exhibited a fuller use of each host and displaced yellow-billed oxpeckers from distal giraffe body parts. These findings highlight that the partition of giraffe hosts in two separate niches was only part of the coexistence story in this species pair. More precisely, the oxpeckers shared the resource by exploiting it at different rates. They engaged in different trade-offs between giving-up density, patch discovery rate and competitor displacement ability. They illustrate the importance of the time frame of interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6832191PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2019.0548DOI Listing

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