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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Field Ornithology: A Journal of Ornithological Investigation >Does morphology predict behavior? Correspondence between behavioral and morphometric data in a Tyrant-flycatcher (Tyrannidae) assemblage in the Santa Marta Mountains, Colombia
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Does morphology predict behavior? Correspondence between behavioral and morphometric data in a Tyrant-flycatcher (Tyrannidae) assemblage in the Santa Marta Mountains, Colombia

机译:Does morphology predict behavior? Correspondence between behavioral and morphometric data in a Tyrant-flycatcher (Tyrannidae) assemblage in the Santa Marta Mountains, Colombia

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摘要

Morphology is commonly used as a predictor of ecological relationships among species when studying local assemblages of Neotropical birds. Nevertheless, most evidence supporting ecomorphological correspondence in birds comes from studies of communities and not from local assemblages and, moreover, from temperate latitudes. To increase our understanding of ecomorphological correspondence in Neotropical assemblages, we used three multivariate approaches to evaluate correspondence between morphological and foraging behavior data in a tyrant-flycatcher assemblage (N= 12 species) in the Santa Marta Mountains in Colombia. Principal components analyses revealed similar species ordinations when using morphological measurements (beak size and shape, tarsus length, wing length, and tail length) or behavioral data (behavioral types of searching for prey and prey capture) separately. Discriminant function analyses tested the ability of morphological traits to predict foraging behavior, showing that more than 90 of all measured individuals (N= 267) were correctly classified in previously defined categories of search and attack behavior. Finally, Canonical correlation analyses revealed a significant correlation between morphological data and two independent datasets of search and attack behavior. Our results demonstrate that morphology can accurately predict ecology in an assemblage of Neotropical tyrannids, and similar results have been reported in previous studies of temperate Tyrant-flycatchers. Our results also show that bill size and shape, wing length, and tarsus length are the best predictors of foraging behavior in this assemblage. Testing for ecomorphological correspondence in other Neotropical taxa would help identify subsets of phenotypic traits that could be used for a practical, but reliable, determination of ecological relationships within different assemblages.

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