6533b858fe1ef96bd12b61f7
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Direct interference or indirect exploitation? An experimental study of fitness costs of interspecific competition in voles
Hannu YlönenJana A. Eccardsubject
Ecologymedia_common.quotation_subjectInterspecific competitionBiologyStorage effectbiology.organism_classificationIntraspecific competitionCompetition (biology)Bank voleHabitatVoleMicrotusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commondescription
Studies on competing mammalian species in the past have focused mainly on the competitive exclusion of one species from the preferred habitat of the other. Investigations on effects of competition and coexistence on individual fitness are rare. In this study we were able to measure effects of interspecific competition on major fitness components, using a system with two vole species in asymmetric competition. Survival, reproduction and space use of bank vole Clethrionomys glareolus females were monitored in 32 enclosed populations over four replicates of eight parallel run enclosures. Into half of the enclosures we introduced an additional number of field voles Microtus agrestis, a dominant competitor. Survival of bank vole females was lower under competitive conditions. Total number of breeding females was lower in populations coexisting with competitors. Territory size of bank vole females decreased. Females body weight and litter size bank vole litters conceived during the experiment were not affected by interspecific competition. These characteristics should respond to differences in food resources, and territory size should increase if food was scarce, thus we found no indication of direct exploitation competition between the two species. Space use was overlapping between the species, but individuals of both species were never caught together in the same trap, indicating avoidance behaviour. We conclude that adult bank vole females do suffer fitness consequences through interference competition with field voles, probably basing on increased number of aggressive encounters in the presence of the dominant species. Our results suggest, that direct interference rather than indirect exploitation competition may be the cause for observed fitness decrease in bank vole females.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002-12-01 | Oikos |