Age- and sex-related dietary specialization facilitate seasonal resource
partitioning in a migratory shorebird
Abstract
1. Dietary specialization is common in animals and has important
implications for individual fitness, inter- and intraspecific
competition, and the adaptive potential of a species. Differences in
diet composition have been well-studied in shorebirds and their allies
(Charadriiformes) and can be influenced by an individual’s morphology,
social status, and acquired skills. In particular, sexual size
dimorphism is thought to facilitate resource partitioning in some
shorebird species. 2. We assessed the role of age- and sex-related
dietary specialization in facilitating resource partitioning between
seasons and among demographic groups in the sexually dimorphic western
sandpiper (Calidris mauri). Using stable isotope mixing models,
we quantified the contribution of biofilm, microphytobenthos, and
benthic invertebrates to the diets of western sandpipers during
mid-winter (January/February) and at the onset of the breeding migration
(April). 3. Diet composition differed between seasons, among demographic
groups, and among demographic groups within each season. In winter, prey
consumption was similar among demographic groups, but, in spring, diet
composition differed among demographic groups with bill length and body
mass explaining 31% of the total variation in diet composition.
Epifaunal invertebrates made up a greater proportion of the diet in
males which had lesser mass and shorter bills than females. Consumption
of Polychaeta increased with increasing bill length and was greatest in
adult females. In contrast, consumption of microphytobenthos, thought to
supply nutrition for migrating sandpipers, increased with decreasing
bill length and was greatest in juvenile males. 4. Our results provide
evidence that age- and sex-related dietary specialization in western
sandpipers facilitate seasonal resource partitioning that would reduce
competition during spring at the onset of the breeding migration. 5.
Understanding resource partitioning throughout the annual cycle and
among different demographic groups is critical because dietary
specialization has important implications for the ecology, evolution,
and conservation of a species.