Mols Christel M M, van Oers Kees, Witjes Leontien M A, Lessells Catherine M, Drent Piet J, Visser Marcel E
Netherlands Institute of Ecology, PO Box 40, 6666 ZG Heteren, The Netherlands.
Proc Biol Sci. 2004 Feb 7;271 Suppl 3(Suppl 3):S85-7. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2003.0110.
The relationship between the encounter rate of predators with prey and the density of this prey is fundamental to models of predator-prey interactions. The relationship determines, among other variables, the rate at which prey patches are depleted, and hence the impact of predator populations on their prey, and the optimal spatial distribution of foraging effort. Two central assumptions that are made in many models are that encounter rate is directly proportional to prey density and that it is independent of the proportion of prey already removed, other than via the decreased density. We show here, using captive great tits searching for winter moth caterpillars in their natural hiding positions, that neither of these assumptions hold. Encounter rate increased less than directly in proportion to prey density, and it depended not only on the current density of prey, but also on the proportion of prey already removed by previous foragers. Both of these effects are likely to have major consequences for the outcome of predator-prey interactions.
捕食者与猎物的相遇率和猎物密度之间的关系是捕食者 - 猎物相互作用模型的基础。除其他变量外,这种关系决定了猎物斑块被耗尽的速度,进而决定了捕食者种群对其猎物的影响以及觅食努力的最佳空间分布。许多模型中做出的两个核心假设是,相遇率与猎物密度成正比,并且除了通过密度降低之外,它与已经被捕食的猎物比例无关。我们在此表明,利用圈养的大山雀在其天然藏身位置寻找冬尺蠖幼虫的实验,这两个假设都不成立。相遇率的增加与猎物密度并非直接成正比,它不仅取决于当前猎物的密度,还取决于先前觅食者已经捕食的猎物比例。这两种效应都可能对捕食者 - 猎物相互作用的结果产生重大影响。