Powolny Thibaut, Bretagnolle Vincent, Aguilar Astrid, Eraud Cyril
Office National de la Chasse et de la Faune Sauvage, Villiers en bois, France; Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Villiers en bois, France.
Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Villiers en bois, France.
PLoS One. 2014 Jul 1;9(7):e101598. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101598. eCollection 2014.
The relationship between intake rate and food density can provide the foundation for models that predict the spatiotemporal distribution of organisms across a range of resource densities. The functional response, describing the relationship between resource density and intake rate is often interpreted mechanistically as the relationships between times spend searching and handling. While several functional response models incorporate anti-predator vigilance (defined here as an interruption of feeding or some other activity to visually scan the environment, directed mainly towards detecting potential predators), the impacts of environmental factors influencing directly anti-predator vigilance remains unclear. We examined the combined effects of different scenarios of predation risk and food density on time allocation between foraging and anti-predator vigilance in a granivorous species. We experimentally exposed Skylarks to various cover heights and seed densities, and measured individual time budget and pecking and intake rates. Our results indicated that time devoted to different activities varied as a function of both seed density and cover height. Foraging time increased with seed density for all cover heights. Conversely, an increased cover height resulted in a decreased foraging time. Contrary to males, the decreased proportion of time spent foraging did not translate into a foraging disadvantage for females. When vegetation height was higher, females maintained similar pecking and intake rates compared to intermediate levels, while males consistently decreased their energy gain. This difference in anti-predator responses suggests a sexually mediated strategy in the food-safety trade-off: when resource density is high a females would adopt a camouflage strategy while an escape strategy would be adopted by males. In other words, males would leave risky-areas, whereas females would stay when resource density is high. Our results suggest that increased predation risk might generate sexually mediated behavioural responses that functional response models should perhaps better consider in the future.
摄食率与食物密度之间的关系可为预测生物在一系列资源密度下的时空分布模型提供基础。功能反应描述了资源密度与摄食率之间的关系,通常从机制上解释为搜索和处理时间之间的关系。虽然有几种功能反应模型纳入了反捕食警惕性(在此定义为中断进食或其他活动以视觉扫描环境,主要用于检测潜在捕食者),但影响直接反捕食警惕性的环境因素的影响仍不清楚。我们研究了不同捕食风险和食物密度情景对一种食谷物种觅食和反捕食警惕性时间分配的综合影响。我们通过实验将云雀暴露于不同的植被高度和种子密度下,并测量个体的时间分配、啄食率和摄食率。我们的结果表明,用于不同活动的时间随种子密度和植被高度而变化。在所有植被高度下,觅食时间随种子密度增加而增加。相反,植被高度增加导致觅食时间减少。与雄性不同,觅食时间比例的减少并未转化为雌性的觅食劣势。当植被高度较高时,雌性与中等水平相比保持相似的啄食率和摄食率,而雄性则持续降低其能量获取。这种反捕食反应的差异表明在食品安全权衡中存在性别介导的策略:当资源密度高时,雌性会采取伪装策略,而雄性会采取逃避策略。换句话说,当资源密度高时,雄性会离开危险区域,而雌性会留下来。我们的结果表明,增加的捕食风险可能会产生性别介导的行为反应,功能反应模型未来或许应更好地考虑这一点。