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Interspecific variation in the phenology of advertisement calling in a temperate A ustralian frog community
Author(s) -
Heard Geoffrey W.,
Canessa Stefano,
Parris Kirsten M.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.1666
Subject(s) - interspecific competition , temperate climate , biology , phenology , ecology , competition (biology) , seasonality
Spatial and temporal partitioning of resources underlies the coexistence of species with similar niches. In communities of frogs and toads, the phenology of advertisement calling provides insights into temporal partitioning of reproductive effort and its implications for community dynamics. This study assessed the phenology of advertisement calling in an anuran community from Melbourne, in southern Australia. We collated data from 1432 surveys of 253 sites and used logistic regression to quantify seasonality in the nightly probability of calling and the influence of meteorological variables on this probability for six species of frogs. We found limited overlap in the predicted seasonal peaks of calling among these species. Those shown to have overlapping calling peaks are unlikely to be in direct competition, due to differences in larval ecology ( C rinia signifera and L itoria ewingii ) or differences in calling behavior and acoustics ( L imnodynastes dumerilii and L itoria raniformis ). In contrast, closely related and ecologically similar species ( C rinia signfera and C rinia parinsignifera ; L itoria ewingii and L itoria verreauxii ) appear to have staggered seasonal peaks of calling. In combination with interspecific variation in the meteorological correlates of calling, these results may be indicative of temporal partitioning of reproductive activity to facilitate coexistence, as has been reported for tropical and temperate anurans from other parts of the globe.

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