Wirsing Aaron J, Heithaus Michael R, Dill Lawrence M
Behavioural Ecology Research Group, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada V5A 1S6.
Oecologia. 2007 Oct;153(4):1031-40. doi: 10.1007/s00442-007-0802-3. Epub 2007 Jul 17.
Predators can influence plants indirectly by altering spatial patterns of herbivory, so studies assessing the relationship between perceived predation risk and habitat use by herbivores may improve our understanding of community organization. In marine systems, the effects of predation danger on space use by large herbivores have received little attention, despite the possibility that predator-mediated alterations in patterns of grazing by these animals influence benthic community structure. We evaluated the relationship between habitat use by foraging dugongs (Dugong dugon) and the threat of tiger shark predation in an Australian embayment (Shark Bay) between 1997 and 2004. Dugong densities were quantified in shallow (putatively dangerous) and deep (putatively safe) habitats (seven survey zones allocated to each habitat), and predation hazard was indexed using catch rates of tiger sharks (Galeocerdo cuvier); seagrass volume provided a measure of food biomass within each zone. Overall, dugongs selected shallow habitats, where their food is concentrated. Foragers used shallow and deep habitats in proportion to food availability (input matching) when large tiger sharks were scarce and overused deep habitats when sharks were common. Furthermore, strong synchrony existed between daily measures of shark abundance and the extent to which deep habitats were overused. Thus, dugongs appear to adaptively manage their risk of death by allocating time to safe but impoverished foraging patches in proportion to the likelihood of encountering predators in profitable but more dangerous areas. This apparent food-safety trade-off has important implications for seagrass community structure in Shark Bay, as it may result in marked temporal variability in grazing pressure.
捕食者可以通过改变食草动物的空间分布模式来间接影响植物,因此评估食草动物感知到的捕食风险与栖息地利用之间关系的研究,可能会增进我们对群落组织的理解。在海洋系统中,尽管大型食草动物因捕食者介导的放牧模式改变可能会影响底栖生物群落结构,但捕食危险对大型食草动物空间利用的影响却很少受到关注。我们评估了1997年至2004年间,澳大利亚海湾(鲨鱼湾)中觅食的儒艮(Dugong dugon)的栖息地利用与虎鲨捕食威胁之间的关系。在浅海(假定危险)和深海(假定安全)栖息地(每个栖息地分配七个调查区域)中对儒艮密度进行了量化,并使用虎鲨(Galeocerdo cuvier)的捕获率来衡量捕食风险;海草体积提供了每个区域内食物生物量的度量。总体而言,儒艮选择了食物集中的浅海栖息地。当大型虎鲨稀少时,觅食者会根据食物可获得性(输入匹配)来利用浅海和深海栖息地,而当鲨鱼数量较多时,则过度利用深海栖息地。此外,鲨鱼数量的每日测量值与深海栖息地被过度利用的程度之间存在很强的同步性。因此, 儒艮似乎通过根据在有利可图但更危险的区域遇到捕食者的可能性,将时间分配到安全但食物匮乏的觅食区域,来适应性地管理它们的死亡风险。这种明显的食物-安全权衡对鲨鱼湾的海草群落结构具有重要意义,因为它可能导致放牧压力出现显著的时间变化。