Skip to main content
Log in

Influence of social status on individual foraging and community structure in a bird guild

  • Original Paper
  • Published:
Oecologia Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

We investigated the influence of social interactions on individual foraging behavior and community structure of frugivorous birds in southern Costa Rica. Detailed observations of large, heterospecific feeding assemblages at fruiting trees revealed the existence of an interspecific dominance hierarchy, largely consistent with body and bill size. Social status influenced access to food in several ways. First, subordinate species were interrupted more and tended to have shorter foraging bouts than dominant species (n > 1.000 abouts). Second, analysis of over 7,000 videotaped head movements showed that subordinate species spent a smaller fraction of their foraging bouts actually feeding (as opposed to looking about) than did dominants. Third, when many birds were in a tree simultaneously, the foraging bouts of subordinate species were shortened; this effect was less pronounced or absent for species higher in the dominance hierarchy. Fourth, subordinate species foraged less frequently in mixed-species assemblages than did dominant species. Finally, subordinate species fed disproportionately more in the late afternoon at fruiting trees. The influence of social status appeared to manifest itself at the community level. The species composition of foraging assemblages was compared at isolated fruiting trees situated in an agricultural landscape near to (< 0.5 km) and far from (> 6 km) a large tract of primary forest. Whereas the full complement of avian frugivores foraged at the near trees, visitors to the far trees were predominantly of high social status. We discuss reasons why high social status and associated traits might confer an advantage in exploiting human-dominated habitat.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Appleby MC (1980) Social rank and food access in red deer stags. Behaviour 74: 294–309

    Google Scholar 

  • Armstrong DP (1992) Correlation between nectar supply and aggression in territorial honeyeaters: causation or coincidence? Behav Ecol Sociobiol 30: 95–102

    Google Scholar 

  • Beehler B (1980) A comparison of avian foraging at flowering trees in Panama and New Guinea. Wilson Bull 92: 513–519

    Google Scholar 

  • Bergquist CAL (1985) Differences in the diet of the male and female tui (Prosthemadera novaeseelandiae: Meliphagidae). NZ J Zool 12: 573–576

    Google Scholar 

  • Bourne GR (1974) The red-billed toucan in Guyana. Living Bird 13: 99–126

    Google Scholar 

  • Caraco T, Pulliam HR (1978) Time budgets and flocking dynamics. Proceedings of the XVIIth International Ornithological Congress, pp 807–812

  • Carothers JH (1986) Behavioral and ecological correlates of some interference competition among some Hawaiian Drepanidinae. Auk 103: 564–574

    Google Scholar 

  • Carpenter FL (1978) A spectrum of nectar-eater communities. Am Zool 18: 809–819

    Google Scholar 

  • Carpenter FL, MacMillen RE (1976) Threshold model of feeding territoriality and test with a Hawaiian honeycreeper. Science 194: 639–642

    Google Scholar 

  • Carpenter FL, MacMillen RE (1980) Resource limitation, foraging strategies, and community structure in Hawaiian honey-creepers. Proceedings of the XVIIth International Ornithological Congress, pp 1100–1104

  • Carpenter FL, Paton DC, Hixon MA (1983) Weight gain and adjustment of feeding territory size in migrant hummingbirds. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 80: 7259–7263

    Google Scholar 

  • Case TJ, Gilpin ME (1974) Interference competition and niche theory. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 71: 3073–3077

    Google Scholar 

  • Cody ML (1971) Finch flocks in the Mohave Desert. Theor Popul Biol 2: 142–158

    Google Scholar 

  • Collins BG, Grey J, McNee S (1990) Foraging and nectar use in nectarivorous bird communities. Stud Avian Biol 13: 110–121

    Google Scholar 

  • Craig JL (1985) Status and foraging in New Zealand honeyeaters. NZ J Zool 12: 589–597

    Google Scholar 

  • Craig JL, Douglass ME (1986) Resource distribution, aggressive asymmetries, and variable access to resources in the nectar feeding bellbird. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 18: 231–240

    Google Scholar 

  • Cruden RW, Herman-Parker SM (1977) Defense of feeding sites by orioles and hepatic tanagers in Mexico. Auk 94: 594–596

    Google Scholar 

  • Crome FHJ (1975) The ecology of fruit pigeons in tropical northern Queensland. Aust Wild Res 2: 155–185

    Google Scholar 

  • Cruz A (1974) Feeding assemblages of Jamaican birds. Condor 76: 103–107

    Google Scholar 

  • Diamond JM (1981) Mixed-species foraging groups. Nature 292: 408–409

    Google Scholar 

  • Diamond JM (1982) Mimicry of friarbirds by orioles. Auk 99: 187–196

    Google Scholar 

  • Diamond JM (1987) Flocks of brown and black New Guinean birds: a bicoloured mixed-species foraging association. Emu 87: 201–211

    Google Scholar 

  • Diamond JM (1988) Experimental study of bower decoration by the bowerbird Amblyornis inornatus, using colored poker chips. Am Nat 131: 631–653

    Google Scholar 

  • Diamond JM, Terborgh J (1967) Observations on bird distribution and feeding assemblages along the Rio Callaria, Loreto, Peru. Wilson Bull 79: 273–282

    Google Scholar 

  • Dow DD (1976) Indiscriminate interspecific aggression leading to almost sole occupancy of space by a single species of bird. Emu 77: 115–121

    Google Scholar 

  • Ehrlich PR, Daily GC (1988) Red-naped sapsuckers feeding at willows: possible keystone herbivores. Am Birds 42: 357–365

    Google Scholar 

  • Emlen JT (1973) Territorial aggression in wintering warblers at Bahama agave blossoms. Wilson Bull 85: 71–74

    Google Scholar 

  • Ford HA (1979) Interspecific competition in Australian honeyeaters-depletion of common resources. Aust J Ecol 4: 145–164

    Google Scholar 

  • Howe HF (1979) Fear and frugivory. Am Nat 114: 925–931

    Google Scholar 

  • Immelmann K (1961) Beiträge zur Biologie und Ethologie australischer Honigfresser (Meliphagidae). J Ornithol 102: 164–207

    Google Scholar 

  • Isler MI, Isler P (1987) The tanagers: natural history, distribution, and identification. Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.

    Google Scholar 

  • Janson C (1985) Aggressive competition and individual food consumption in wild brown capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 18: 125–138

    Google Scholar 

  • Janson C (1988) Food competition in brown capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella): quantitative effects of group size and tree productivity. Behaviour 105: 165–186

    Google Scholar 

  • Leck CF (1972) Seasonal changes in feeding pressures of fruit- and nectar-eating birds in Panama. Condor 74: 54–60

    Google Scholar 

  • Martin TE (1987) Food as a limit on breeding birds: a life-history perspective. Annu Rev Ecol Syst 18: 453–487

    Google Scholar 

  • Maurer BA (1984) Interference and exploitation in bird communities. Wilson Bull 96: 380–395

    Google Scholar 

  • Maurer BA (1990) Extensions of optimal foraging theory for insectivorous birds: implications for community structure. Stud Avian Biol 13: 455–461

    Google Scholar 

  • Merrit PG (1980) Group foraging by mockingbirds in a Florida strangler fig. Auk 97: 869–872

    Google Scholar 

  • Moermond TC, Denslow JS (1985) Neotropical avian frugivores: patterns of behavior, morphology, and nutrition, with consequences for fruit selection. Ornithol Monogr 36: 865–897

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse DH (1970) Ecological aspects of some mixed-species foraging flocks of birds. Ecol Monogr 40: 119–168

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse DH (1971) The foraging of warblers isolated on small islands. Ecology 52: 216–228

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse DH (1974) Niche breadth as a function of social dominance. Am Nat 108: 818–830

    Google Scholar 

  • Morse DH (1977) Feeding behavior and predator avoidance in heterospecific groups. BioScience 27: 332–339

    Google Scholar 

  • Moynihan M (1962) The organization and probable evolution of some mixed species flocks of neotropical birds. Smithson Misc Coll 143: 1–140

    Google Scholar 

  • Moynihan M (1968) Social mimicry: character convergence versus character displacement. Evolution 22: 315–331

    Google Scholar 

  • Moynihan M (1979) Geographic variation in social behavior and in adaptations to competition among Andean birds. Nuttall Ornithol Club. Cambridge, Massachussets

    Google Scholar 

  • Petren K, Bolger DT, Case TJ (1993) Mechanisms in the competitive success of an invading sexual gecko over an asexual native. Science 259: 354–358

    Google Scholar 

  • Pimm SL (1978) An experimental approach to the effects of predictability on community structure. Amer Zool 18: 797–808

    Google Scholar 

  • Powell GVN (1985) Sociobiology and adaptive significance of interspecific foraging flocks in the neotropics Ornithol Monogr 36: 713–732

    Google Scholar 

  • Powell GVN (1989) On the possible contribution of mixed species flocks to species richness in neotropical avifaunas. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 24: 387–393

    Google Scholar 

  • Pratt TK (1984) Examples of tropical frugivores defending fruit-bearing plants. Condor 86: 123–129

    Google Scholar 

  • Pulliam HR, Anderson KA, Misztal A, Moore N (1973) Temperature-dependent social behaviour in juncos. Ibis 116: 360–364

    Google Scholar 

  • Pyke GH (1984) Optimal foraging theory: a critical review. Annu Rev Ecol Syst 15: 523–575

    Google Scholar 

  • Pyke GH, Pulliam HR, Charnov EL (1977) Optimal foraging: a selective review of theory and tests. Q Rev Biol 52: 137–154

    Google Scholar 

  • Richner H (1989) Phenotypic correlates of dominance in carrion crows and their effects on access to food. Anim Behav 38: 606–612

    Google Scholar 

  • Ripley SD (1959) Competition between sunbird and honeyeater species in the Moluccan Islands. Am Nat 93: 127–132

    Google Scholar 

  • Roughgarden J (1979) Theory of population genetics and evolutionary ecology: an introduction. Macmillan, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Schoener TW (1976) Alternatives to Lotka-Volterra competition: models of intermediate complexity. Theor Popul Biol 10: 309–333

    Google Scholar 

  • Sherry TW (1979) Competitive interactions and adaptive strategies of American redstarts and least flycatchers in a northern hardwoods forest. Auk 96: 265–283

    Google Scholar 

  • Sherry TW, Holmes RT (1989) Age-specific social dominance effects habitat use by breeding American redstarts (Setophagaruticilla): a removal experiment. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 25: 327–333

    Google Scholar 

  • Snow BK, Snow DW (1971) The feeding ecology of tanagers and honeycreepers in Trinidad. Auk 88: 291–322

    Google Scholar 

  • Sokal RR, Rohlf FJ (1981) Biometry. Freeman, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Stephens DW, Krebs JR (1986) Foraging theory: Princeton University Press, Princeton

    Google Scholar 

  • Stiles FG (1983) Birds. In: Janzen DH (ed) Costa Rican natural history, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp 502–530

    Google Scholar 

  • Stiles FG, Skutch AF (1989) Birds of Costa Rica. Cornell University Press, Ithaca

    Google Scholar 

  • Terborgh J (1983) Five New World primates. Princeton University Press, Princeton

    Google Scholar 

  • Terborgh J (1990) Mixed-species flocks and polyspecific associations: costs and benefits of mixed groups to birds and monkeys. Am J Primatol 21: 87–100

    Google Scholar 

  • Terborgh J, Diamond J (1970) Niche overlap in feeding assemblages of New Guinea birds. Wilson Bull 82: 29–52

    Google Scholar 

  • Vaughton G (1990) Seasonal variation in honeyeater foraging behavior, inflorescence abundance and fruit set in Banksia spinulosa (Proteaceae). Aust J Ecol 15: 109–116

    Google Scholar 

  • Waser PM (1987) Interactions among primate species. In: Smuts B, Cheney D, Seyfarth R, Wrangham R, Struhsaker T (eds) Primate societies. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, pp 210–226

    Google Scholar 

  • Williams JB, Batzli GO (1979) Interference competition and niche shifts in the bark-foraging guild in central Illinois. Wilson Bull 91: 400–411

    Google Scholar 

  • Willis EO (1966) Competetive exclusion and birds at fruiting trees in western Colombia. Auk 83: 479–480

    Google Scholar 

  • Ydenberg RC, Houston AI (1986) Optimal tradeoffs between competing behavioral demands in the great tit. Anim Behav 34: 1041–1050

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Daily, G.C., Ehrlich, P.R. Influence of social status on individual foraging and community structure in a bird guild. Oecologia 100, 153–165 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00317142

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00317142

Key words

Navigation