Moseby Katherine E, Blumstein Daniel T, Letnic Mike
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences The University of Adelaide Adelaide SA Australia; Arid Recovery Ltd. Roxby Downs SA Australia.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Los Angeles CA USA.
Evol Appl. 2015 Nov 17;9(2):334-43. doi: 10.1111/eva.12332. eCollection 2016 Feb.
Many populations are threatened or endangered because of excessive predation resulting from individuals' inability to recognize, avoid, or escape alien predators. Such prey naïveté is often attributed to the absence of prior experience and co-evolution between native prey and introduced predators. Many reintroduction programs focus on reducing predation rate by excluding introduced predators, a focus which ignores, and indeed exacerbates, the problem of prey naïveté. We argue for a new paradigm in reintroduction biology that expands the focus from predator control to kick-starting learning and evolutionary processes between alien predators and reintroduced prey. By exposing reintroduced prey to carefully controlled levels of alien predators, in situ predation could enhance reintroduction success by facilitating acquisition of learned antipredator responses and through natural selection for appropriate antipredator traits. This in situ predator exposure should be viewed as a long-term process but is likely to be the most efficient and expedient way to improve prey responses and assist in broadscale recovery of threatened species.
许多种群因个体无法识别、躲避或逃离外来捕食者而导致过度捕食,从而受到威胁或濒临灭绝。这种猎物的天真往往归因于缺乏先前的经验以及本地猎物与引入的捕食者之间缺乏共同进化。许多重新引入计划侧重于通过排除引入的捕食者来降低捕食率,而这种关注忽视甚至加剧了猎物天真的问题。我们主张在重新引入生物学中采用一种新的范式,将重点从捕食者控制扩大到启动外来捕食者与重新引入的猎物之间的学习和进化过程。通过使重新引入的猎物接触经过精心控制的外来捕食者水平,就地捕食可以通过促进习得的反捕食反应的获得以及通过对适当反捕食特征的自然选择来提高重新引入的成功率。这种就地捕食者接触应被视为一个长期过程,但很可能是改善猎物反应并协助受威胁物种大规模恢复的最有效和便捷的方法。