Coexistence of Australian Rainforest Diptera Breeding in Fallen Fruit
- 1 June 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JSTOR in Journal of Animal Ecology
- Vol. 54 (2), 507-518
- https://doi.org/10.2307/4495
Abstract
Twenty-eight species of Diptera, including 5 spp. of Drosophila [D. immigrans, D. pseudotakahashii, D. specensis, D. melanogaster, D. simulans] were reared from fallen fruit collected in subtrophical rainforest sites in eastern Australia. The aim was to determine whether aggregation cold explain the persistence of this diverse community of flies. There was little niche differentiation among the flies, many of the species sharing the same kind of fruit. Though there was less overlap over individual fruit items, the dipteran species were not negatively associated as they would be if the low overlap was caused by sytematic niche separation. Low overlap over fruit items would be expected if the fly populations were kept at a low level by density-independent mortality and this might also explain the persistence of a diverse community. There was widespread intraspecific competition which would not be expected if density-independent mortality was important. If this guild of flies was maintained by aggregation over discrete and ephemeral breeding sites we could expect low overlap of the species over fruit items, random associations between the species and evidence of intraspecific competition. These were all observed in this guild. Adult flies emerging from the fruits also showed sufficient aggregation to account for their coexitence, as did eggs laid in the wild on artificial breeding sites. The occurrence together of these phenomena suggests strongly that the model of Atkinson and Shorrocks (1981) best explains the coexistence of so many species of Diptera.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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- The detection of different degrees of coexistenceJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1967
- The Influence of Adult and Larval Food Habits on Population Size of Neotropical Ground-Feeding DrosophilaThe American Midland Naturalist, 1965
- An Analytical Study of Population Growth in Drosophila melanogasterEcological Monographs, 1950