Birds and lizards of the Antilles: a re-evaluation of old evidence leads
to new conclusions: A synthesis
Abstract
Predation regimes on many oceanic islands are known to be weak. Evidence
gathered in the 1970s and 1980s shows that Antillean anoles live at
higher densities on fewer resources, grow more slowly, reproduce later,
and live longer than mainland counterparts. Living at high densities
should select for the ability to subsist on minimum resource levels, the
definition of a superior resource competitor. These results imply that
island anoles, and by inference, birds, experience low predation but
intense competition, whereas mainland species experience the opposite.
Further support is found in the phenomenon of community saturation in
Antillean birds, an unexpected finding underlain by hyperdispersed body
size ratios within avian foraging guilds, low alpha diversity and low
species packing within guilds, all being evidence that these guilds are
structured by competition. Islands should thus not be regarded as havens
for weak competitors, but rather as refuges from predation. It follows
that intense predation regimes prevent island species from colonizing
mainlands, and that competition and/or low resource levels prevent
mainland species from colonizing islands. These predictions are
experimentally testable with lizards and if confirmed, could set island
biogeography on a new course.