2011
DOI: 10.3354/meps09376
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Variability of resource partitioning in sympatric tropical boobies

Abstract: Inter-and intraspecific competition can lead to resource partitioning in sympatric species, processes likely affected by environmental productivity and population size. We investigated the foraging behaviour and diet of masked (Sula dactylatra) and red-footed (S. sula) boobies at Tromelin Island, western Indian Ocean, to examine the role of resource partitioning in the foraging strategies of these sympatric species in an extreme oligotrophic environment. We compared our results to published studies with differ… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(114 reference statements)
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“…Tropical seabirds frequently exploit all marine areas within a species' flight range, leading to a dispersed distribution around islands (Kappes et al 2011, Hennicke & Weimerskirch 2014, Oppel et al 2015. This dispersed distribution could occur by individuals consistently travelling to a certain location, with individuals exhibiting differences in their preferred foraging location, thus leading to a dispersed distribution at the population level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tropical seabirds frequently exploit all marine areas within a species' flight range, leading to a dispersed distribution around islands (Kappes et al 2011, Hennicke & Weimerskirch 2014, Oppel et al 2015. This dispersed distribution could occur by individuals consistently travelling to a certain location, with individuals exhibiting differences in their preferred foraging location, thus leading to a dispersed distribution at the population level.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RFBs and masked boobies from Palmyra Atoll showed strong differences in their foraging behaviour and ranges, with RFBs being again more pelagic than masked boobies (Young et al 2010). The 2 same species at Tromelin Island (Indian Ocean), surrounded by more oligotrophic waters, demonstrated interspecific segregation at the level of core foraging areas but not at the scale of the whole foraging region (Kappes et al 2011). However, intraand interspecific competition did not explain the higher maximum ranges observed at Tern Island (3000 to 5000 RFB pairs) compared to Palmyra Atoll that hosts 25 000 RFB pairs and 1 more tropical booby species (Young et al 2015).…”
Section: Resource Partitioningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kappes et al 2011, Oppel et al 2015. The wide distribution of RFB populations provides the opportunity to examine the influence of contrasted biotic and abiotic conditions from different breeding sites on foraging behaviour.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The variability among sub-samples should be assessed including maximum and minimum estimates in area occupied, along with the range in geographic locations of those areas. Increasingly, studies are including significance tests for overlap analyses; the proportional area of overlap between specified contours estimated for groups of interest from full datasets are compared with those estimated from randomized iterative sub-samples as a test of whether enough individuals were tracked to make reasonable higher-level inferences of significant spatial segregation (e.g., Breed et al, 2006;Kappes et al, 2011;Cleasby et al, 2015;Orben et al, 2015). This approach, coupled with area saturation curves, can improve confidence in the appropriateness of higher-level extrapolations.…”
Section: Kernel Contour Locations Were Determined From Pooled Kde Itementioning
confidence: 99%