Bleicher Sonny S, Dickman Christopher R
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; Felidae Conservation Fund, Mill Valley, CA, USA.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW , Australia.
PeerJ. 2016 Jan 21;4:e1609. doi: 10.7717/peerj.1609. eCollection 2016.
In environments where food resources are spatially variable and temporarily impoverished, consumers that encounter habitat patches with different food density should focus their foraging initially where food density is highest before they move to patches where food density is lower. Increasing missed opportunity costs should drive individuals progressively to patches with lower food density as resources in the initially high food density patches deplete. To test these expectations, we assessed the foraging decisions of two species of dasyurid marsupials (dunnarts: Sminthopsis hirtipes and S. youngsoni) during a deep drought, or bust period, in the Simpson Desert of central Australia. Dunnarts were allowed access to three patches containing different food densities using an interview chamber experiment. Both species exhibited clear preference for the high density over the lower food density patches as measured in total harvested resources. Similarly, when measuring the proportion of resources harvested within the patches, we observed a marginal preference for patches with initially high densities. Models analyzing behavioral choices at the population level found no differences in behavior between the two species, but models analyzing choices at the individual level uncovered some variation. We conclude that dunnarts can distinguish between habitat patches with different densities of food and preferentially exploit the most valuable. As our observations were made during bust conditions, experiments should be repeated during boom times to assess the foraging economics of dunnarts when environmental resources are high.
在食物资源在空间上分布不均且暂时匮乏的环境中,当遇到食物密度不同的栖息地斑块时,消费者应首先将觅食重点放在食物密度最高的斑块,然后再转移到食物密度较低的斑块。随着最初食物密度高的斑块中的资源耗尽,错过机会成本的增加应会促使个体逐渐转向食物密度较低的斑块。为了验证这些预期,我们评估了两种袋鼬科有袋动物(袋鼬属:粗毛袋鼬和扬氏袋鼬)在澳大利亚中部辛普森沙漠的严重干旱期(即食物匮乏期)的觅食决策。通过一个访谈室实验,让袋鼬能够进入三个食物密度不同的斑块。从收获的总资源来看,这两个物种都表现出对高密度斑块而非低密度斑块有明显偏好。同样,在测量斑块内收获的资源比例时,我们观察到对最初高密度斑块有轻微偏好。在种群水平上分析行为选择的模型发现这两个物种的行为没有差异,但在个体水平上分析选择的模型发现了一些变化。我们得出结论,袋鼬能够区分不同食物密度的栖息地斑块,并优先利用最有价值的斑块。由于我们的观察是在食物匮乏条件下进行的,因此应在食物丰富时期重复实验,以评估环境资源丰富时袋鼬的觅食经济学。