Biology Department, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, Dartmouth, MA, USA.
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2020 Jun;89(6):1302-1316. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13213. Epub 2020 Apr 20.
There is a large and growing interest in non-consumptive effects (NCEs) of predators. Diverse and extensive evidence shows that predation risk directly influences prey traits, such as behaviour, morphology and physiology, which in turn, may cause a reduction in prey fitness components (i.e. growth rate, survival and reproduction). An intuitive expectation is that NCEs that reduce prey fitness will extend to alter population growth rate and therefore population size. However, our intensive literature search yielded only 10 studies that examined how predator-induced changes in prey traits translate to changes in prey population size. Further, the scant evidence for risk-induced changes on prey population size have been generated from studies that were performed in very controlled systems (mesocosm and laboratory), which do not have the complexity and feedbacks of natural settings. Thus, although likely that predation risk alone can alter prey population size, there is little direct empirical evidence that demonstrates that it does. There are also clear reasons that risk effects on population size may be much smaller than the responses on phenotype and fitness components that are typically measured, magnifying the need to show, rather than infer, effects on population size. Herein we break down the process of how predation risk influences prey population size into a chain of events (predation risk affects prey traits, which affect prey fitness components and population growth rate, which affect prey population size), and highlight the complexity of each transition. We illustrate how the outcomes of these transitions are not straightforward, and how environmental context strongly dictates the direction and magnitude of effects. Indeed, the high variance in prey responses is reflected in the variance of results reported in the few studies that have empirically quantified risk effects on population size. It is therefore a major challenge to predict population effects given the complexity of how environmental context interacts with predation risk and prey responses. We highlight the critical need to appreciate risk effects at each level in the chain of events, and that changes at one level cannot be assumed to translate into changes in the next because of the interplay between risk, prey responses, and the environment. The gaps in knowledge we illuminate underscore the need for more evidence to substantiate the claim that predation risk effects extend to prey population size. The lacunae we identify should inspire future studies on the impact of predation risk on population-level responses in free-living animals.
人们对捕食者的非消费性影响(NCE)越来越感兴趣。大量广泛的证据表明,捕食风险直接影响猎物特征,例如行为、形态和生理学,这反过来又可能导致猎物适应度成分(即增长率、存活率和繁殖率)降低。一个直观的期望是,降低猎物适应度的 NCE 将延伸到改变种群增长率,从而改变种群大小。然而,我们的文献检索仅发现了 10 项研究,这些研究探讨了捕食者诱导的猎物特征变化如何转化为猎物种群大小的变化。此外,关于捕食风险对猎物种群大小的影响的证据很少,这些证据来自于在非常受控的系统(中观和实验室)中进行的研究,这些系统没有自然环境的复杂性和反馈。因此,尽管捕食风险可能单独改变猎物种群大小,但几乎没有直接的经验证据表明它确实如此。也有明显的原因表明,风险对种群大小的影响可能比通常测量的表型和适应度成分的反应小得多,这放大了展示而不是推断对种群大小的影响的必要性。在此,我们将捕食风险影响猎物种群大小的过程分解为一系列事件(捕食风险影响猎物特征,这些特征影响猎物适应度成分和种群增长率,这些影响猎物种群大小),并强调每个过渡的复杂性。我们说明这些过渡的结果并不简单,以及环境背景如何强烈决定影响的方向和程度。事实上,猎物反应的高度变异性反映在少数经验量化了风险对种群大小的影响的研究报告的结果变异性中。因此,鉴于环境背景与捕食风险和猎物反应之间的相互作用的复杂性,预测种群效应是一项重大挑战。我们强调需要在事件链的每个级别都了解风险效应,并认识到由于风险、猎物反应和环境之间的相互作用,一个级别的变化不能假定会转化为下一个级别的变化。我们阐明的知识空白突出表明需要更多证据来证实捕食风险的影响延伸到猎物种群大小的说法。我们确定的差距应该激发未来关于捕食风险对自由生活动物种群水平反应的影响的研究。