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1 June 2009 Consequence of Inter Class Competition and Predation on the Adaptive Radiation of Lizards and Birds in the Dry Forest of Western Madagascar
Masami Hasegawa, Akira Mori, Masahiko Nakamura, Taku Mizuta, Shigeki Asai, Isami Ikeuchi, Hajarinina Rakotomanana, Takayoshi Okamiya, Satoshi Yamagishi
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Abstract

Species interactions among phylogenetically distant but ecologically related vertebrates were studied in a dry forest of western Madagascar to evaluate whether competition and predation between lizards and birds have reciprocally affected adaptive radiation in Madagascar. Of 49 terrestrial and diurnal birds regularly seen in the study forest, we identified six guilds as carnivore (5 spp.), omnivore (2 spp.), carnivore/insectivore (7 spp.), strict insectivore (15 spp.), insectivore/nectarivore (6 spp.), and frugivore (5 spp.). Twelve lizards species were classified as omnivore (1 sp.), strict insectivore (9 spp.), and insectivore with occasional frugivory and nectarivory (2 spp.). The most dominant guilds of the vertebrates in terms of biomass were folivorous/frugivorous parrots, doves, and lemurs (6.7 kg/ha), followed by insectivorous lizards (1.7 kg/ha) and insectivorous birds (0.8 kg/ha) in the Ampijoroa dry forest. Despite their lower biomass, insectivorous birds appeared to be competitively more advantageous than the lizards in terms of prey consumption speed (230 prey/ha/hr by birds vs. 35 prey/ha/hr by lizards). Insectivorous and carnivorous birds may have kept insectivorous lizards from radiating in various niches in Madagascar, and may have promoted a reclusive lifestyle in lizards.

© The Ornithological Society of Japan 2009
Masami Hasegawa, Akira Mori, Masahiko Nakamura, Taku Mizuta, Shigeki Asai, Isami Ikeuchi, Hajarinina Rakotomanana, Takayoshi Okamiya, and Satoshi Yamagishi "Consequence of Inter Class Competition and Predation on the Adaptive Radiation of Lizards and Birds in the Dry Forest of Western Madagascar," Ornithological Science 8(1), 55-66, (1 June 2009). https://doi.org/10.2326/048.008.0108
Received: 23 April 2009; Accepted: 26 May 2009; Published: 1 June 2009
KEYWORDS
Adaptive radiation
birds
competition
Lizards
predation
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