| Literature DB >> 30019409 |
Courtney L Davis1,2, Lindsey N Rich3, Zach J Farris4,5, Marcella J Kelly4, Mario S Di Bitetti6,7,8, Yamil Di Blanco6,7, Sebastian Albanesi9, Mohammad S Farhadinia10,11, Navid Gholikhani12, Sandra Hamel13, Bart J Harmsen14,15, Claudia Wultsch4,14,16, Mamadou D Kane17, Quinton Martins18,19, Asia J Murphy1,2, Robin Steenweg20, Sunarto Sunarto21, Atieh Taktehrani12, Kanchan Thapa4,22, Jody M Tucker23, Jesse Whittington24, Febri A Widodo21, Nigel G Yoccoz13, David A W Miller1.
Abstract
The composition of local mammalian carnivore communities has far-reaching effects on terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. To better understand how carnivore communities are structured, we analysed camera trap data for 108 087 trap days across 12 countries spanning five continents. We estimate local probabilities of co-occurrence among 768 species pairs from the order Carnivora and evaluate how shared ecological traits correlate with probabilities of co-occurrence. Within individual study areas, species pairs co-occurred more frequently than expected at random. Co-occurrence probabilities were greatest for species pairs that shared ecological traits including similar body size, temporal activity pattern and diet. However, co-occurrence decreased as compared to other species pairs when the pair included a large-bodied carnivore. Our results suggest that a combination of shared traits and top-down regulation by large carnivores shape local carnivore communities globally.Entities:
Keywords: Camera trap; ecological traits; global assessment; interspecific interactions; local community structure; spatial co-occurrence
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30019409 DOI: 10.1111/ele.13124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecol Lett ISSN: 1461-023X Impact factor: 9.492