Allen Maximilian L, Elbroch L Mark, Wilmers Christopher C, Wittmer Heiko U
School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Panthera, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jul 10;9(7):e102257. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0102257. eCollection 2014.
Scavenging is a widespread behaviour and an important process influencing food webs and ecological communities. Large carnivores facilitate the movement of energy across trophic levels through the scavenging and decomposition of their killed prey, but competition with large carnivores is also likely to constrain acquisition of carrion by scavengers. We used an experimental approach based on motion-triggered video cameras at black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) carcasses to measure the comparative influences of two large carnivores in the facilitation and limitation of carrion acquisition by scavengers. We found that pumas (Puma concolor) and black bears (Ursus americanus) had different effects on their ecological communities. Pumas, as a top-level predator, facilitated the consumption of carrion by scavengers, despite significantly reducing their observed sum feeding times (165.7 min ± 21.2 SE at puma kills 264.3 min ± 30.1 SE at control carcasses). In contrast, black bears, as the dominant scavenger in the system, limited consumption of carrion by scavengers as evidenced by the observed reduction of scavenger species richness recorded at carcasses where they were present (mean = 2.33 ± 0.28 SE), compared to where they were absent (mean = 3.28 ± 0.23 SE). Black bears also had large negative effects on scavenger sum feeding times (88.5 min ± 19.8 SE at carcasses where bears were present, 372.3 min ± 50.0 SE at carcasses where bears were absent). In addition, we found that pumas and black bears both increased the nestedness (a higher level of order among species present) of the scavenger community. Our results suggest that scavengers have species-specific adaptions to exploit carrion despite large carnivores, and that large carnivores influence the structure and composition of scavenger communities. The interactions between large carnivores and scavengers should be considered in future studies of food webs and ecological communities.
食腐行为广泛存在,是影响食物网和生态群落的重要过程。大型食肉动物通过对其捕杀猎物的食腐和分解,促进了能量在营养级之间的流动,但与大型食肉动物的竞争也可能限制食腐动物获取腐肉。我们采用基于运动触发式摄像机的实验方法,在黑尾鹿(Odocoileus hemionus columbianus)尸体处,测量两种大型食肉动物在促进和限制食腐动物获取腐肉方面的比较影响。我们发现美洲狮(Puma concolor)和黑熊(Ursus americanus)对其生态群落有不同影响。美洲狮作为顶级捕食者,尽管显著缩短了观察到的总进食时间(美洲狮捕杀的尸体处为165.7分钟±21.2标准误,对照尸体处为264.3分钟±30.1标准误),但促进了食腐动物对腐肉的消耗。相比之下,黑熊作为系统中的优势食腐动物,限制了食腐动物对腐肉的消耗,这一点从有黑熊的尸体处记录到的食腐动物物种丰富度降低得到证明(平均值 = 2.33 ± 0.28标准误),而在没有黑熊的尸体处(平均值 = 3.28 ± 0.23标准误)。黑熊对食腐动物的总进食时间也有很大的负面影响(有熊的尸体处为88.5分钟±19.8标准误,无熊的尸体处为372.3分钟±50.0标准误)。此外,我们发现美洲狮和黑熊都增加了食腐动物群落的嵌套性(现存物种之间更高层次的秩序)。我们的结果表明,尽管有大型食肉动物,食腐动物仍有针对利用腐肉的物种特异性适应,并且大型食肉动物会影响食腐动物群落的结构和组成。在未来关于食物网和生态群落的研究中,应考虑大型食肉动物和食腐动物之间的相互作用。