Spatial Niche Expansion at Multiple Habitat Scales of a Tropical Freshwater Turtle in the Absence of a Potential Competitor
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Are the study species co-occurring in a same micro-habitat or do they exhibit apparent differences in habitat utilization?
- (2)
- If the two species differ in their habitat utilization, are these differences found at multiple spatial scales?
- (3)
- Are the eventual habitat differences due, at least in part, to interspecific competition?
- (4)
- If so, do habitat preferences of either of these two species change when allopatric from a potential competitor?
- (5)
- Is the assumption that P. cupulatta habitat use is similar to its sister species (Pelusios niger) confirmed by our field evidence?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Species
2.2. Study Sites
2.3. Protocol
- (a)
- Water current speed—within a 10 m radius around the sighting point of each individual turtle we evaluated the water current speed by eye in one of three categories: 0 = no current; 1 = moderate current; 2 = high current.
- (b)
- Bank type—we described the type of bank linked to the water body where each individual turtle was sighted as: 0 = no bank vegetation (only organic substratum, bare); 1 = rocky banks (rocky); 2 = bank with mainly herbaceous vegetation (grassy); 3 = forested banks, i.e., when the bank vegetation consisted of a strip of gallery forest.
- (c)
- Aquatic vegetation—classified as: 0 = no aquatic vegetation; 1 = moderate aquatic vegetation (1–25% covered by aquatic plants); 2 = high aquatic vegetation (26–50% cover); 3 = very high aquatic vegetation (>51% cover). The percentage of aquatic vegetation cover was evaluated by eye within a radius of 10 m around the site of sighting of each individual turtle. Since we grouped vegetation in four large categories based on the estimated percentage of vegetation cover, this design would have been problematic in cases where the percentage of vegetative cover was at the limit between two categories (such as 24% in one site and 26% in another site). These sites would have been categorized such that they were as different as two sites that had e.g., 2% and 49% cover. Although these were clearly not equivalent comparisons, we defined the three percentages of vegetative cover categories after having examined the distribution of sample sizes to verify that there were no such “threshold cases” in our samples.
2.4. Statistical Analyses
3. Results
3.1. General Data
3.2. Spatial Niche Characteristics in Sympatric Populations
3.3. Spatial Niche Characteristics of Pelusios castaneus in Allopatry
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Petrozzi, F.; Ajong, S.N.; Pacini, N.; Dendi, D.; Bi, S.G.; Fa, J.E.; Luiselli, L. Spatial Niche Expansion at Multiple Habitat Scales of a Tropical Freshwater Turtle in the Absence of a Potential Competitor. Diversity 2021, 13, 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020055
Petrozzi F, Ajong SN, Pacini N, Dendi D, Bi SG, Fa JE, Luiselli L. Spatial Niche Expansion at Multiple Habitat Scales of a Tropical Freshwater Turtle in the Absence of a Potential Competitor. Diversity. 2021; 13(2):55. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020055
Chicago/Turabian StylePetrozzi, Fabio, Stephanie N. Ajong, Nic Pacini, Daniele Dendi, Sery Gonedele Bi, Julia E. Fa, and Luca Luiselli. 2021. "Spatial Niche Expansion at Multiple Habitat Scales of a Tropical Freshwater Turtle in the Absence of a Potential Competitor" Diversity 13, no. 2: 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020055
APA StylePetrozzi, F., Ajong, S. N., Pacini, N., Dendi, D., Bi, S. G., Fa, J. E., & Luiselli, L. (2021). Spatial Niche Expansion at Multiple Habitat Scales of a Tropical Freshwater Turtle in the Absence of a Potential Competitor. Diversity, 13(2), 55. https://doi.org/10.3390/d13020055