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Stable isotopes reveal differences in diet among reed bunting subspecies that vary in bill size
Authors:Júlio Manuel Neto  Luís de Oliveira Gordinho  Benjamin Vollot  Marcial Marín  Juan S Monrós  Jason Newton
Institution:1. CIBIO/UP – Centro de Investiga??o em Biodiversidade e Recursos Genéticos, Univ. do Porto, Vair?o, Portugal;2. Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab, MEMEG, Dept of Biology, Lund, Sweden;3. Pont de Gau, Les Saintes Maries de la Mer, France;4. Inst. ‘Cavanilles’ of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, Univ. of Valencia, Paterna, Spain;5. NERC Life Sciences Mass Spectrometry Facility, Glasgow, UK
Abstract:Reed bunting Emberiza schoeniclus subspecies vary considerably in bill size and shape and seem to be at an early stage of speciation, in which bill might be indirectly causing reproductive isolation. Hence, we evaluated whether bill size, as well as age and sex, are associated with foraging niche in three west European subspecies of reed bunting: the thin‐billed schoeniclus, the intermediate‐billed lusitanica and the thick‐billed witherbyi. Blood sampling was undertaken at three sites in southwest Europe during the winter (when these subspecies co‐occur), and stable isotope analyses (carbon and nitrogen) were performed to assess their foraging niches. Stable isotope analyses of potential food items confirmed uniform baseline isotopic composition among sites. schoeniclus showed a significantly broader isotopic niche than lusitanica and witherbyi, which seemed otherwise similar despite the fact that witherbyi is more divergent in bill traits. Stable isotope ratios were consistent with the latter two subspecies feeding on C3‐plant‐feeding insects, whereas schoeniclus diet also included C4 plant material. Despite its lower sexual dimorphism, sex and age differences were found only in schoeniclus, but these differences vary between locations in a complex manner. Our results suggest that bill size and shape differentiated between northern, migratory and southern, resident subspecies as a consequence of natural selection through competition during the winter, which is now reflected in isotopic niche divergence between subspecies. The potential roles of sexual selection, reed thickness and summer temperature on the difference in bill size (and greater sexual dimorphism) between lusitanica and witherbyi are discussed.
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