*Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l'Insecte, CNRS UMR 7261, Université François Rabelais, 37200 Tours, France; INRA, UR0272, UR Science du sol, Centre de recherche Val de Loire, CS 40001, F-45075 Orléans Cedex 2, France.
Integr Comp Biol. 2013 Nov;53(5):767-79. doi: 10.1093/icb/ict061. Epub 2013 May 28.
Pursuit and evasion behaviors in many predator-prey encounters occur in a geometrically structured environment. The physical structures in the environment impose strong constraints on the perception and behavioral responses of both antagonists. Nevertheless, no experimental or theoretical study has tackled the issue of quantifying the role of the habitat's architecture on the joint trajectories during a predator-prey encounter. In this study, we report the influence of microtopography of forest leaf litter on the pursuit-evasion trajectories of wolf spiders Pardosa sp. attacking the wood cricket Nemobius sylvestris. Fourteen intact leaf litter samples of 1 m × 0.5 m were extracted from an oak-beech forest floor in summer and winter, with later samples having the most recently fallen leaves. Elevation was mapped at a spatial resolution of 0.5 mm using a laser scanner. Litter structuring patterns were identified by height transects and experimental semi-variograms. Detailed analysis of all visible leaf-fragments of one sample enabled us to relate the observed statistical patterns to the underlying geometry of individual elements. Video recording of pursuit-evasion sequences in arenas with flat paper or leaf litter enabled us to estimate attack and fleeing distances as a function of substrate. The compaction index, the length of contiguous flat surfaces, and the experimental variograms showed that the leaf litter was smoother in summer than in winter. Thus, weathering as well as biotic activities compacted and flattened the litter over time. We found good agreement between the size of the structuring unit of leaf litter and the distance over which attack and escape behaviors both were initiated (both ∼3 cm). There was a four-fold topographical effect on pursuit-escape sequences; compared with a flat surface, leaf litter (1) greatly reduced the likelihood of launching a pursuit, (2) reduced pursuit and escape distances by half, (3) put prey and predator on par in terms of pursuit and escape distances, and (4) reduced the likelihood of secondary pursuits, after initial escape of the prey, to nearly zero. Thus, geometry of the habitat strongly modulates the rules of pursuit-evasion in predator-prey interactions in the wild.
在许多捕食者-猎物遭遇中,追逐和逃避行为发生在具有几何结构的环境中。环境中的物理结构对两个对手的感知和行为反应施加了很强的约束。然而,没有实验或理论研究解决量化栖息地结构对捕食者-猎物遭遇期间共同轨迹的作用的问题。在这项研究中,我们报告了森林落叶微地形对狼蛛 Pardosa sp.攻击林蟋蟀 Nemobius sylvestris 的追逐-逃避轨迹的影响。在夏季和冬季,从橡-山毛榉林的林地板上提取了 14 个 1 m × 0.5 m 的完整落叶样本,后续样本是最近才掉落的叶子。使用激光扫描仪以 0.5 毫米的空间分辨率对海拔进行了测绘。通过高度横切和实验半变异函数来识别落叶结构模式。对一个样本的所有可见叶片碎片的详细分析使我们能够将观察到的统计模式与单个元素的基础几何形状联系起来。在具有平坦纸张或落叶的竞技场中记录追逐-逃避序列的视频,使我们能够根据基质估计攻击和逃跑距离。压实指数、连续平坦表面的长度和实验半变异函数表明,落叶在夏季比冬季更光滑。因此,随着时间的推移,风化以及生物活动会压实和压平落叶。我们发现落叶结构单元的大小与攻击和逃避行为开始的距离之间存在很好的一致性(均约为 3 厘米)。地形对追逐-逃避序列有四倍的影响;与平坦表面相比,落叶(1)大大降低了发起追逐的可能性,(2)将追逐和逃跑距离减少了一半,(3)使猎物和捕食者在追逐和逃跑距离方面处于同等地位,以及(4)将猎物最初逃跑后的二次追逐的可能性降低到几乎为零。因此,栖息地的几何形状强烈调节了野生环境中捕食者-猎物相互作用中的追逐-逃避规则。