AI Article Synopsis

  • Mechanisms that help closely related species coexist, like niche differentiation, play a key role in maintaining biodiversity, focusing here on the concept of allochrony, which refers to the timing difference in resource use between species.
  • The study examines the non-breeding migrations of two penguin species, Snares and Fiordland, which breed close to each other but have different migration timings, revealing how this allochrony affects their foraging distributions and reduces competition.
  • Findings indicate that the Fiordland penguins migrate to specific ocean zones in the autumn while Snares penguins disperse in winter, suggesting that seasonal changes in resource availability and timing help them avoid overlapping and compete less during their core non-b

Article Abstract

Mechanisms promoting coexistence between closely related species are fundamental for maintaining species diversity. Mechanisms of niche differentiation include allochrony which offsets the peak timing of resource utilisation between species. Many studies focus on spatial and temporal niche partitioning during the breeding season, few have investigated the role allochrony plays in influencing interspecific segregation of foraging distribution and ecology between congeneric species during the non-breeding season. We investigated the non-breeding migrations of Snares (Eudyptes robustus) and Fiordland penguins (Eudyptes pachyrhynchus), closely related species breeding between 100-350 km apart whose migration phenology differs by two months. Using light geolocation tracking, we examined the degree of overlap given the observed allochrony and a hypothetical scenario where the species commence migration simultaneously. We found that Fiordland penguins migrated to the Sub-Antarctic Frontal Zone and Polar Frontal Zone in the austral autumn whereas Snares penguins disperse westwards staying north of the Sub-Tropical Front in the austral winter. Our results suggest that allochrony is likely to be at the root of segregation because the relative profitability of the different water masses that the penguins forage in changes seasonally which results in the two species utilising different areas over their core non-breeding periods. Furthermore, allochrony reduces relatively higher levels of spatiotemporal overlap during the departure and arrival periods, when the close proximity of the two species' colonies would cause the birds to congregate in similar areas, resulting in high interspecific competition just before the breeding season. Available evidence from other studies suggests that the shift in phenology between these species has arisen from adaptive radiation and phenological matching to the seasonality of local resource availability during the breeding season and reduced competitive overlap over the non-breeding season is likely to be an incidental outcome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8827451PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0262901PLOS

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