Foraging of rocky habitat cichlid fishes in Lake Malawi: coexistence through niche partitioning?

被引:0
|
作者
Martin J. Genner
George F. Turner
Stephen J. Hawkins
机构
[1] Division of Biodiversity and Ecology,
[2] School of Biological Sciences,undefined
[3] University of Southampton,undefined
[4] Southampton,undefined
[5] SO16 7PX,undefined
[6] UK e-mail: genner@soton.ac.uk,undefined
[7] Tel./Fax: +44-1703-594793,undefined
来源
Oecologia | 1999年 / 121卷
关键词
Key words Lake Malawi; Cichlid fishes; Coexistence; Diet; Niche partitioning;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The haplochromine cichlid fish communities of the rocky habitats of Lake Malawi are highly diverse; however, many species live side by side with apparently very similar resource requirements. There is a long-standing debate concerning whether these species partition their resources on a finer scale than has been previously reported or if species that are truly ecologically indistinguishable can coexist. A field study of food resource use was conducted to determine whether coexisting species segregate their diet and foraging sites. Significant differences between species were found, yet considerable inter-specific resource use overlap was commonplace. The data indicate that these cichlid species coexist both with and without niche differentiation. We propose that alternatives to niche differentiation should be considered to explain how many species coexist in Lake Malawi cichlid communities.
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页码:283 / 292
页数:9
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