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Individual trophic specialisation and niche segregation explain the contrasting population trends of two sympatric otariids
Authors:Valentina Franco-Trecu  David Aurioles-Gamboa  Pablo Inchausti
Affiliation:1. Proyecto Pinnípedos, Sección Etología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de la República, Iguá 4225, 11400, Montevideo, Uruguay
2. Laboratorio de Ecología de Pinnípedos Burney J. Le Boeuf, Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Ave IPN s/n, CP 23096, La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico
3. Departamento de Ecología y Evolución, Centro Universitario Regional Este (CURE), Universidad de la República, Tacuarembó S/N, 20000, Maldonado, Uruguay
Abstract:Individual specialisation is increasingly recognised to be an ecological and evolutionary process having important consequences for population dynamics of vertebrates. The South American fur seal (SAFS) and the South American sea lion (SASL) are two otariid species with similar ecology that coexist in sympatry in the Uruguayan coast. These two species have contrasting trends and widely different population sizes. The underlying reasons for these population trends, unique in their geographical ranges, remain unknown. We studied the foraging ecology of these otariid species over 2 years at the individual- and population levels using the isotopic ratios (δ13C–δ15N) in whiskers of both sexes. We compared the isotope ratios between species and sexes and used several metrics to characterise the degree of overlap and distinctiveness in the use of isotopic niche space at the individual- and population levels. Interspecific trophic niche overlap was minimal, thus ruling out interspecific competition as the cause for the contrasting population trends of both species. At the intraspecific level, both species had sexual segregation in their foraging areas, but each species had a large overlap in the isotopic niches between sexes. While SAFS had a wider niche and generalist individuals, SASL had the narrower niche with a higher degree of individual specialisation. Behavioural constraints during the breeding season, intraspecific competition and a major dependence on resources of the Uruguayan coastal shelf may explain why SASL had a higher trophic individual specialisation and a larger vulnerability in a heavily exploited habitat by fisheries and, by consequence, a locally declining population trend.
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