Behavioural and morphological traits influence sex-specific floral resource use by hummingbirds

María A. Maglianesi, Pietro K. Maruyama, Ethan J. Temeles, Matthias Schleuning, Thais B. Zanata, Marlies Sazima, Aquiles Gutiérrez-Zamora, Oscar H. Marín-Gómez, Liliana Rosero-Lasprilla, Mónica B. Ramírez-Burbano, Alejandra E. Ruffini, J. Ricardo Salamanca-Reyes, Ivan Sazima, Laura E. Nuñez-Rosas, María del Coro Arizmendi, Carsten Rahbek, Bo Dalsgaard

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

9 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Research on resource partitioning in plant–pollinator mutualistic systems is mainly concentrated at the levels of species and communities, whereas differences between males and females are typically ignored. Nevertheless, pollinators often show large sexual differences in behaviour and morphology, which may lead to sex-specific patterns of resource use with the potential to differentially affect plant reproduction and diversification. We investigated variation in behavioural and morphological traits between sexes of hummingbird species as potential mechanisms underlying sex-specific flower resource use in ecological communities. To do so, we compiled a dataset of plant–hummingbird interactions based on pollen loads for 31 hummingbird species from 13 localities across the Americas, complemented by data on territorial behaviour (territorial or non-territorial) and morphological traits (bill length, bill curvature, wing length and body mass). We assessed the extent of intersexual differences in niche breadth and niche overlap in floral resource use across hummingbird species. Then, we tested whether floral niche breadth and overlap between sexes are associated with sexual dimorphism in behavioural or morphological traits of hummingbird species while accounting for evolutionary relatedness among the species. We found striking differences in patterns of floral resource use between sex. Females had a broader floral niche breadth and were more dissimilar in the plant species visited with respect to males of the same species, resulting in a high level of resource partitioning between sexes. We found that both territoriality and morphological traits were related to sex-specific resource use by hummingbird species. Notably, niche overlap between sexes was greater for territorial than non-territorial species, and moreover, niche overlap was negatively associated with sexual dimorphism in bill curvature across hummingbird species. These results reveal the importance of behavioural and morphological traits of hummingbird species in sex-specific resource use and that resource partitioning by sex is likely to be an important mechanism to reduce intersexual competition in hummingbirds. These findings highlight the need for better understanding the putative role of intersexual variation in shaping patterns of interactions and plant reproduction in ecological communities.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)2171-2180
Número de páginas10
PublicaciónJournal of Animal Ecology
Volumen91
N.º11
DOI
EstadoPublicada - nov 2022
Publicado de forma externa

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