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Unfamiliarity generates costly aggression in interspecific avian dominance hierarchies

Leighton, Gavin M.; Drury, Jonathan P.; Small, Jay; Miller, Eliot T.

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Authors

Gavin M. Leighton

Jay Small

Eliot T. Miller



Abstract

Dominance hierarchies often form between species, especially at common feeding locations. Yet, relative to work focused on the factors that maintain stable dominance hierarchies within species, large-scale analyses of interspecific dominance hierarchies have been comparatively rare. Given that interspecific behavioral interference mediates access to resources, these dominance hierarchies likely play an important and understudied role in community assembly and behavioral evolution. To test alternative hypotheses about the formation and maintenance of interspecific dominance hierarchies, we employ an large, participatory science generated dataset of displacements observed at feeders in North America in the non-breeding season. Consistent with the hypothesis that agonistic interference can be an adaptive response to exploitative competition, we find that species with similar niches are more likely to engage in costly aggression over resources. Among interacting species, we find broad support for the hypothesis that familiarity (measured as fine-scale habitat overlap) predicts adherence to the structure of the dominance hierarchy and reduces aggression between species. Our findings suggest that the previously documented agonistic hierarchy in North American birds emerges from species-level adaptations and learned behaviors that result in the avoidance of costly aggression.

Citation

Leighton, G. M., Drury, J. P., Small, J., & Miller, E. T. (2024). Unfamiliarity generates costly aggression in interspecific avian dominance hierarchies. Nature Communications, 15(1), Article 335. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44613-0

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 21, 2023
Online Publication Date Jan 6, 2024
Publication Date Jan 6, 2024
Deposit Date Jan 4, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 10, 2024
Journal Nature Communications
Electronic ISSN 2041-1723
Publisher Nature Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Issue 1
Article Number 335
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-44613-0
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2079191

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