Basso Enzo, Drever Mark C, Fonseca Juanita, Navedo Juan G
Bird Ecology Lab Instituto de Ciencias Marinas y Limnológicas Universidad Austral de Chile Valdivia Chile.
Programa de Doctorado en Ecología y Evolución Facultad de Ciencias Universidad Austral de Chile Valdivia Chile.
Ecol Evol. 2021 Sep 7;11(19):13379-13389. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8059. eCollection 2021 Oct.
Varying environmental conditions and energetic demands can affect habitat use by predators and their prey. Anthropogenic habitats provide an opportunity to document both predation events and foraging activity by prey and therefore enable an empirical evaluation of how prey cope with trade-offs between starvation and predation risk in environments of variable foraging opportunities and predation danger. Here, we use seven years of observational data of peregrine falcons and shorebirds at a semi-intensive shrimp farm to determine how starvation and predation risk vary for shorebirds under a predictable variation in foraging opportunities. Attack rate (mean 0.1 attacks/hr, equating 1 attack every ten hours) was positively associated with the total foraging area available for shorebirds at the shrimp farm throughout the harvesting period, with tidal amplitude at the adjacent mudflat having a strong nonlinear (quadratic) effect. Hunt success (mean 14%) was higher during low tides and declined as the target flocks became larger. Finally, individual shorebird vigilance behaviors were more frequent when birds foraged in smaller flocks at ponds with poorer conditions. Our results provide empirical evidence of a risk threshold modulated by tidal conditions at the adjacent wetlands, where shorebirds trade-off risk and rewards to decide to avoid or forage at the shrimp farm (a potentially dangerous habitat) depending on their need to meet daily energy requirements. We propose that semi-intensive shrimp farms serve as ideal "arenas" for studying predator-prey dynamics of shorebirds and falcons, because harvest operations and regular tidal cycles create a mosaic of foraging patches with predictable food supply. In addition, the relatively low hunt success suggests that indirect effects associated with enhanced starvation risk are important in shorebird life-history decisions.
不同的环境条件和能量需求会影响捕食者及其猎物的栖息地利用情况。人为栖息地为记录捕食事件以及猎物的觅食活动提供了机会,因此能够对猎物在觅食机会和捕食危险多变的环境中如何应对饥饿与捕食风险之间的权衡进行实证评估。在此,我们利用在一个半集约化养虾场对游隼和滨鸟进行的七年观测数据,来确定在可预测的觅食机会变化情况下,滨鸟面临的饥饿和捕食风险如何变化。攻击率(平均每小时0.1次攻击,即每十小时一次攻击)与整个收获期养虾场可供滨鸟使用的总觅食面积呈正相关,相邻泥滩的潮汐幅度具有强烈的非线性(二次)效应。狩猎成功率(平均14%)在低潮时较高,且随着目标鸟群规模增大而下降。最后,当滨鸟在条件较差的池塘中以较小鸟群觅食时,其个体警惕行为更为频繁。我们的研究结果提供了经验证据,表明相邻湿地的潮汐条件调节着一个风险阈值,滨鸟会根据满足每日能量需求的需要,在风险和回报之间进行权衡,以决定是避开还是在养虾场(一个潜在危险的栖息地)觅食。我们提出,半集约化养虾场是研究滨鸟和游隼捕食者 - 猎物动态的理想“场所”,因为收获作业和有规律的潮汐周期创造了具有可预测食物供应的觅食斑块镶嵌体。此外,相对较低的狩猎成功率表明,与饥饿风险增加相关的间接影响在滨鸟的生活史决策中很重要。