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Habitat selection and coexistence of migrants and Afrotropical residents
Authors:BERND LEISLER
Affiliation:Max-Planck-Institut fürVerhaltensphysiologie, Vogelwarte, D-7760 Radolfzell, Germany
Abstract:In this paper I discuss factors that influence the habitat choice of small migrant birds on their Afrotropical wintering grounds and the ecological isolation of migrants and residents. The main characteristic of migrants is the use of resources which are sporadic in space and time. The majority of migrants occur in seasonal savannas and open woodland, mostly using temporarily and locally abundant food sources generally unused by residents. Migrants are more eurytopic and exploit more open parts of the habitats than ecologically similar tropical species. In some guilds, the foraging speed and rate of migrants is higher and they use their wings more often in comparison to residents. There is weak evidence that niche shifts of residents are induced by the arrival of migrants. Overt interspecific interactions seem to be infrequent, except in a guild of ground-feeding birds which rely on a rather predictable but poor food supply. In this guild, residents, but not intra-African migrants, dominated Palaearctic migrants in aggressive encounters irrespective of body-size. In contrast to this, dominance was size-dependent among wintering Palaearctic migrants.
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