Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, 82071, USA.
Conservation Department, Ol Pejeta Conservancy, Private Bag-10400, Nanyuki, Kenya.
Ecology. 2019 Jul;100(7):e02698. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2698. Epub 2019 May 2.
The vulnerability of an individual to predation depends on the availability of other prey items in the surrounding environment. Interspecific prey aggregations or "neighborhoods" may therefore affect an individual's vulnerability to predation. We examined the influence of prey neighborhood structure (i.e., the densities and identities of prey neighborhoods) on spatial variation in predation in a multi-prey system with a primary apex predator. We combined GPS locations of lions (Panthera leo), kill-site surveys, and spatially explicit density estimates of five species of ungulates for which a significant level of predation was attributable to lions. In addition to the dual influence of predator activity and vegetation, predation risk was attributable to the structure of prey neighborhoods for at least two of the five species of prey. Along with traditionally recognized components of predation (the rate of predator-prey encounters and prey catchability), we encourage ecologists to consider how prey neighborhood structure influences spatial variation in predation risk.
个体易遭受捕食的程度取决于其周围环境中其他猎物的可利用性。因此,种间猎物聚集或“邻里”可能会影响个体易遭受捕食的程度。我们研究了猎物邻里结构(即猎物邻里的密度和身份)对具有主要顶级捕食者的多猎物系统中捕食空间变化的影响。我们将狮子( Panthera leo )的 GPS 位置、捕杀地点调查以及可归因于狮子的五种有蹄类动物的空间明确密度估计值结合在一起。除了捕食者活动和植被的双重影响外,捕食风险至少归因于其中两种猎物的邻里结构。除了传统上公认的捕食成分(捕食者-猎物相遇的速度和猎物被捕食的可捕性)外,我们鼓励生态学家考虑猎物邻里结构如何影响捕食风险的空间变化。