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Interspecific territoriality has facilitated recent increases in the breeding habitat overlap of North American passerines

Cite this dataset

Nesbit, Daniel; Cowen, Madeline; Grether, Greg; Drury, Jonathan (2023). Interspecific territoriality has facilitated recent increases in the breeding habitat overlap of North American passerines [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.qfttdz0nc

Abstract

As species’ ranges shift in response to human-induced global changes, species interactions are expected to play a large role in shaping the resultant range dynamics and, subsequently, the composition of modified species assemblages. Most research on the impact of species interactions on range dynamics focuses on the effects of trophic interactions and exploitative competition for resources, but an emerging body of work shows that interspecific competition for territories and mates also affects species range shifts. As such, it is paramount to build a strong understanding of how these forms of behavioural interference between species impact landscape-scale patterns. Here, we examine recent (1997–2019) range dynamics of North American passerines to test the hypothesis that behavioural interference impacts the ease with which species move across landscapes. Over this 22-year period, we found that fine-scale spatial overlap between species (syntopy) increased more for species pairs that engage in interspecific territoriality than for those that do not. We found no evidence, however, for an effect of reproductive interference (hybridisation) on syntopy, and no effect of either type of interference on range-wide overlap (sympatry). Examining the net effects of species interactions on continent-scale range shifts may require species occurrence data spanning longer time periods than are currently available for North American passerines, but our results show that interspecific territoriality has had an overall stabilising influence on species coexistence over the past two decades.

Methods

This species pair dataset was collated by Drury et al. (2020). Measures of syntopy and sympatry were calculated using North American Breeding Bird Survey data from 1997–2021, the code for which is available in the data deposition of Drury et al. (2020). 'Synt_Symp_PLMM_Code.R' contains code to run phylogenetic linear mixed models using the R package MCMCglmm and data from 'Species_Pairs_Synt_Symp.csv'. INphylo.RData is the phylogeny used in the PLMMs.

Please see the README document ("README.md") and the accompanying article: Interspecific territoriality has facilitated recent increases in the breeding habitat overlap of North American passerines. Ecography. Accepted.

Usage notes

Please see the README document ("README.md") and the accompanying article: Interspecific territoriality has facilitated recent increases in the breeding habitat overlap of North American passerines. Ecography. Accepted.

Funding

Natural Environment Research Council, Award: IAPETUS2