Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN, 55104, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA.
Oecologia. 2021 Jan;195(1):235-248. doi: 10.1007/s00442-020-04816-4. Epub 2021 Jan 2.
The mere threat of predation may incite behavioral changes in prey that lead to community-wide impacts on productivity, biodiversity, and nutrient cycling. The paucity of experimental manipulations, however, has contributed to controversy over the strength of this pathway in wide-ranging vertebrate systems. We investigated whether simulated gray wolf (Canis lupus) presence can induce behaviorally-mediated trophic cascades, specifically, whether the 'fear' of wolf olfactory cues alone can change deer foraging behavior in ways that affect plants and soils. Wolves were recently removed from the Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve (Minnesota, USA), such that consumptively mediated predator effects were negligible. At 32 experimental plots, we crossed two nested treatments: wolf urine application and herbivore exclosures. We deployed camera traps to quantify how white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) adjusted their spatiotemporal habitat use, foraging, and vigilance in response to wolf cues and how these behavioral changes affected plant productivity, plant communities, and soil nutrients. Weekly applications of wolf urine significantly altered deer behavior, but deer responses did not cascade to affect plant or soil properties. Deer substantially reduced crepuscular activity at wolf-simulated sites compared to control locations. As wolves in this area predominantly hunted during mornings and evenings, this response potentially allows deer to maximize landscape use by accessing dangerous areas when temporal threat is low. Our experiment suggests that prey may be sensitive to 'dynamic' predation risk that is structured across both space and time and, consequentially, prey use of risky areas during safe times may attenuate behaviorally-mediated trophic cascades at the predator-prey interface.
仅仅是被捕食的威胁,就可能促使猎物发生行为变化,从而对整个群落的生产力、生物多样性和养分循环产生广泛影响。然而,由于缺乏实验操作,这一途径在广泛的脊椎动物系统中作用强度存在争议。我们研究了模拟灰狼(Canis lupus)存在是否能引发行为介导的营养级联,具体来说,仅仅是狼嗅觉线索的“恐惧”是否能改变鹿的觅食行为,从而影响植物和土壤。狼最近已从雪松溪生态系统科学保护区(美国明尼苏达州)中被移除,因此,消耗性介导的捕食者效应可以忽略不计。在 32 个实验样地中,我们交叉进行了两个嵌套处理:狼尿应用和食草动物围栏。我们使用摄像机陷阱来量化白尾鹿(Odocoileus virginianus)如何根据狼的线索调整其时空栖息地利用、觅食和警戒行为,以及这些行为变化如何影响植物生产力、植物群落和土壤养分。每周应用狼尿会显著改变鹿的行为,但鹿的反应并没有级联到影响植物或土壤特性。与对照地点相比,在模拟狼的地点,鹿在黄昏时的活动明显减少。由于该地区的狼主要在早晚狩猎,这种反应可能使鹿在时间威胁较低时,通过进入危险区域最大限度地利用景观。我们的实验表明,猎物可能对空间和时间上都有结构的“动态”捕食风险敏感,因此,猎物在安全时间内对危险区域的利用可能会减轻捕食者-猎物界面的行为介导的营养级联。