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Intraspecific competition drives increased resource use diversity within a natural population
by
Svanbäck, Richard
, Bolnick, Daniel I
in
Animals
/ Behavior, Animal
/ Biologi
/ Biology
/ Competitive Behavior
/ Diet
/ Diversification
/ Ecological competition
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecological modeling
/ Evolution
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Foraging
/ Gasterosteus aculeatus
/ Genetic variation
/ Individual Specialization
/ Intraspecific Competition
/ Limnologi
/ Limnology
/ Natural resources
/ NATURAL SCIENCES
/ NATURVETENSKAP
/ Negative Frequency Dependence
/ Optimal Foraging Theory
/ Population Density
/ Population ecology
/ Smegmamorpha - physiology
2007
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Intraspecific competition drives increased resource use diversity within a natural population
by
Svanbäck, Richard
, Bolnick, Daniel I
in
Animals
/ Behavior, Animal
/ Biologi
/ Biology
/ Competitive Behavior
/ Diet
/ Diversification
/ Ecological competition
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecological modeling
/ Evolution
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Foraging
/ Gasterosteus aculeatus
/ Genetic variation
/ Individual Specialization
/ Intraspecific Competition
/ Limnologi
/ Limnology
/ Natural resources
/ NATURAL SCIENCES
/ NATURVETENSKAP
/ Negative Frequency Dependence
/ Optimal Foraging Theory
/ Population Density
/ Population ecology
/ Smegmamorpha - physiology
2007
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Intraspecific competition drives increased resource use diversity within a natural population
by
Svanbäck, Richard
, Bolnick, Daniel I
in
Animals
/ Behavior, Animal
/ Biologi
/ Biology
/ Competitive Behavior
/ Diet
/ Diversification
/ Ecological competition
/ Ecological genetics
/ Ecological modeling
/ Evolution
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Foraging
/ Gasterosteus aculeatus
/ Genetic variation
/ Individual Specialization
/ Intraspecific Competition
/ Limnologi
/ Limnology
/ Natural resources
/ NATURAL SCIENCES
/ NATURVETENSKAP
/ Negative Frequency Dependence
/ Optimal Foraging Theory
/ Population Density
/ Population ecology
/ Smegmamorpha - physiology
2007
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Intraspecific competition drives increased resource use diversity within a natural population
Journal Article
Intraspecific competition drives increased resource use diversity within a natural population
2007
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Overview
Resource competition is thought to play a major role in driving evolutionary diversification. For instance, in ecological character displacement, coexisting species evolve to use different resources, reducing the effects of interspecific competition. It is thought that a similar diversifying effect might occur in response to competition among members of a single species. Individuals may mitigate the effects of intraspecific competition by switching to use alternative resources not used by conspecific competitors. This diversification is the driving force in some models of sympatric speciation, but has not been demonstrated in natural populations. Here, we present experimental evidence confirming that competition drives ecological diversification within natural populations. We manipulated population density of three-spine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus) in enclosures in a natural lake. Increased population density led to reduced prey availability, causing individuals to add alternative prey types to their diet. Since phenotypically different individuals added different alternative prey, diet variation among individuals increased relative to low-density control enclosures. Competition also increased the diet-morphology correlations, so that the frequency-dependent interactions were stronger in high competition. These results not only confirm that resource competition promotes niche variation within populations, but also show that this increased diversity can arise via behavioural plasticity alone, without the evolutionary changes commonly assumed by theory.
Publisher
The Royal Society
Subject
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