School of Life & Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Department of Zoology, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
J Anim Ecol. 2017 Oct;86(6):1317-1328. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12748. Epub 2017 Oct 9.
Searching for food is the first critical stage of foraging, and search efficiency is enhanced when foragers use cues from foods they seek. Yet we know little about food cues used by one major group of mammals, the herbivores, a highly interactive component of most ecosystems. How herbivores forage and what disrupts this process, both have significant ecological and evolutionary consequences beyond the animals themselves. Our aim was to investigate how free-ranging mammalian herbivores exploit leaf odour cues to find food plants amongst a natural and complex vegetation community. Our study system comprised the native "deer equivalent" of eastern Australian forests, the swamp wallaby Wallabia bicolor, and seedlings of Eucalyptus, the foundation tree genus in these ecosystems. We quantified how foraging wallabies responded to odour cues from plants manipulated in several ways: varying the quantity of visually concealed leaves, comparing damaged vs. undamaged leaves, and whole plants vs. those with suppressed cues. The rate of discovery of leaves by wallabies increased with odour cue magnitude, yet animals were extremely sensitive to even a tiny odour source of just a few leaves. Whole seedlings were discovered faster if their leaves were damaged. Wallabies found whole seedlings and those with suppressed visual cues equally rapidly, day and night. Seedlings with very little odour were discovered mainly by day, as nocturnal foraging success was severely disrupted. This study shows how leaf odour attracts mammalian herbivores to food plants, enabling non-random search for even tiny odour sources. As damaged leaves enhanced discovery, we suggest that the benefit of attracting natural enemies to invertebrate herbivores feeding on plants (potential "cry for help") may be offset by a cost-increased browsing by mammalian herbivores. This cost should be incorporated into multi-trophic plant-animal studies. Finally, the breakdown in capacity to find plants at night suggests substantial but unrecognized foraging costs to herbivores when abiotic factors, such as cold temperatures or pollution, reduce or degrade plant odour cues. We predict that an increasingly polluted world will alter the foraging success of mammalian herbivores, with significant ecological ramifications given that browsing can shape ecosystems.
觅食是觅食的第一个关键阶段,当觅食者利用它们所寻找的食物的线索时,搜索效率会提高。然而,我们对一类主要的哺乳动物——食草动物所使用的食物线索知之甚少,它们是大多数生态系统中高度互动的组成部分。食草动物如何觅食,以及是什么破坏了这个过程,这两者对动物本身之外的生态和进化都有重要的影响。我们的目的是调查自由放养的哺乳动物食草动物如何利用叶子气味线索在自然而复杂的植被群落中找到食物植物。我们的研究系统包括澳大利亚东部森林的本地“鹿等价物”——沼泽沙袋鼠(Wallabia bicolor)和这些生态系统中基础树种桉树的幼苗。我们量化了觅食沙袋鼠对以几种方式处理的植物气味线索的反应:改变视觉上隐藏的叶子数量、比较受损和未受损的叶子,以及整株植物与抑制气味的植物。沙袋鼠发现叶子的速度随着气味线索的大小而增加,但即使是一小部分气味来源,动物也非常敏感。受损的叶子会使整株幼苗更快地被发现。沙袋鼠白天和黑夜都能同样快速地发现整株幼苗和抑制视觉线索的幼苗。气味很少的幼苗主要在白天被发现,因为夜间觅食的成功率受到严重干扰。这项研究表明,叶子气味如何吸引哺乳动物食草动物到食物植物,使即使是微小的气味来源也能进行非随机搜索。由于受损的叶子提高了发现的可能性,我们认为吸引以植物为食的无脊椎动物的天敌(潜在的“呼救”)的好处可能会被食草哺乳动物增加的啃食所抵消。这一成本应该被纳入多营养层植物-动物研究中。最后,夜间寻找植物能力的下降表明,当环境因素(如低温或污染)减少或降解植物气味线索时,食草动物会面临相当大但未被认识到的觅食成本。我们预测,一个污染日益严重的世界将改变哺乳动物食草动物的觅食成功率,鉴于啃食可以塑造生态系统,这将产生重大的生态影响。