Data from: Competition-driven build-up of habitat isolation and selection favouring dispersal modification in a young avian hybrid zone

No Thumbnail Available

Restricted Availability

Date

2016-07-18, 2016-07-18

Persistent identifier of the Data Catalogue metadata

Creator/contributor

Editor

Journal title

Journal volume

Publisher

Publication Type

dataset

Peer Review Status

Repositories

Access rights

ISBN

ISSN

Description

Competition-driven evolution of habitat isolation is an important mechanism of ecological speciation but empirical support for this process is often indirect. We examined how an on-going displacement of pied flycatchers from their preferred breeding habitat by collared flycatchers in a young secondary contact zone is associated with (a) access to an important food resource (caterpillar larvae), (b) immigration of pied flycatchers in relation to habitat quality, and (c) the risk of hybridization in relation to habitat quality. Over the past 12 years, the estimated access to caterpillar larvae biomass in the habitat surrounding the nests of pied flycatchers has decreased by a fifth due to shifted establishment possibilities, especially for immigrants. However, breeding in the high quality habitat has become associated with such a high risk of hybridization for pied flycatchers that overall selection currently favors pied flycatchers that were forced to immigrate into the poorer habitats (despite lower access to preferred food items). Our results show that competition-driven habitat segregation can lead to fast habitat isolation, which per se caused an opportunity for selection to act in favor of future "voluntarily" altered immigration patterns and possibly strengthened habitat isolation through reinforcement.

Link to original dataset

Keyword (yso)

Keyword

Publication Series

Journal title

Location of the original dataset