School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Heydon-Laurence Building A08, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Biodiversity Strategy and Knowledge Branch, Biodiversity Division, Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning, 8 Nicholson Street, East Melbourne, VIC, 3002, Australia.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2022 Aug;97(4):1539-1558. doi: 10.1111/brv.12853. Epub 2022 Mar 23.
Both fire and predators have strong influences on the population dynamics and behaviour of animals, and the effects of predators may either be strengthened or weakened by fire. However, knowledge of how fire drives or mediates predator-prey interactions is fragmented and has not been synthesised. Here, we review and synthesise knowledge of how fire influences predator and prey behaviour and interactions. We develop a conceptual model based on predator-prey theory and empirical examples to address four key questions: (i) how and why do predators respond to fire; (ii) how and why does prey vulnerability change post-fire; (iii) what mechanisms do prey use to reduce predation risk post-fire; and (iv) what are the outcomes of predator-fire interactions for prey populations? We then discuss these findings in the context of wildlife conservation and ecosystem management before outlining priorities for future research. Fire-induced changes in vegetation structure, resource availability, and animal behaviour influence predator-prey encounter rates, the amount of time prey are vulnerable during an encounter, and the conditional probability of prey death given an encounter. How a predator responds to fire depends on fire characteristics (e.g. season, severity), their hunting behaviour (ambush or pursuit predator), movement behaviour, territoriality, and intra-guild dynamics. Prey species that rely on habitat structure for avoiding predation often experience increased predation rates and lower survival in recently burnt areas. By contrast, some prey species benefit from the opening up of habitat after fire because it makes it easier to detect predators and to modify their behaviour appropriately. Reduced prey body condition after fire can increase predation risk either through impaired ability to escape predators, or increased need to forage in risky areas due to being energetically stressed. To reduce risk of predation in the post-fire environment, prey may change their habitat use, increase sheltering behaviour, change their movement behaviour, or use camouflage through cryptic colouring and background matching. Field experiments and population viability modelling show instances where fire either amplifies or does not amplify the impacts of predators on prey populations, and vice versa. In some instances, intense and sustained post-fire predation may lead to local extinctions of prey populations. Human disruption of fire regimes is impacting faunal communities, with consequences for predator and prey behaviour and population dynamics. Key areas for future research include: capturing data continuously before, during and after fires; teasing out the relative importance of changes in visibility and shelter availability in different contexts; documenting changes in acoustic and olfactory cues for both predators and prey; addressing taxonomic and geographic biases in the literature; and predicting and testing how changes in fire-regime characteristics reshape predator-prey interactions. Understanding and managing the consequences for predator-prey communities will be critical for effective ecosystem management and species conservation in this era of global change.
火和捕食者都对动物的种群动态和行为有强烈的影响,捕食者的影响可能会因火而增强或减弱。然而,关于火如何驱动或介导捕食者-猎物相互作用的知识是零散的,尚未得到综合。在这里,我们回顾和综合了火如何影响捕食者和猎物行为和相互作用的知识。我们基于捕食者-猎物理论和实证案例开发了一个概念模型,以回答四个关键问题:(i)捕食者如何以及为何对火做出反应;(ii)猎物的脆弱性在火灾后如何以及为何发生变化;(iii)猎物在火灾后使用哪些机制来降低被捕食的风险;以及(iv)捕食者-火相互作用对猎物种群的结果是什么?然后,我们在野生动物保护和生态系统管理的背景下讨论这些发现,最后概述未来研究的优先事项。植被结构、资源可用性和动物行为的火灾诱导变化影响捕食者-猎物的遭遇率、猎物在遭遇期间易受伤害的时间长短,以及给定遭遇时猎物死亡的条件概率。捕食者对火的反应取决于火的特征(例如季节、严重程度)、它们的狩猎行为(伏击或追捕捕食者)、移动行为、领域性和种内动态。依赖栖息地结构来躲避捕食的猎物物种通常在最近燃烧的地区经历更高的捕食率和更低的存活率。相比之下,一些猎物物种受益于火灾后栖息地的开放,因为这使得更容易发现捕食者并适当改变它们的行为。火灾后猎物的身体状况变差会通过以下两种方式增加被捕食的风险:要么是因为逃避捕食者的能力受损,要么是因为能量压力导致需要在危险区域觅食。为了在火灾后的环境中降低被捕食的风险,猎物可能会改变它们的栖息地利用方式、增加庇护行为、改变它们的移动行为,或者通过伪装来躲避捕食者,例如通过隐蔽的颜色和背景匹配。实地实验和种群生存力模型表明,在某些情况下,火灾会放大或不放大捕食者对猎物种群的影响,反之亦然。在某些情况下,强烈和持续的火灾后捕食可能导致猎物种群的局部灭绝。人类对火灾发生规律的干扰正在影响动物群落,对捕食者和猎物的行为和种群动态产生影响。未来研究的重点包括:在火灾前后连续采集数据;在不同背景下梳理可见度和庇护可用性变化的相对重要性;记录捕食者和猎物的声音和嗅觉线索的变化;解决文献中的分类和地理偏见;并预测和测试火灾发生规律特征的变化如何重塑捕食者-猎物相互作用。了解和管理捕食者-猎物群落的后果对于在全球变化时代进行有效的生态系统管理和物种保护将是至关重要的。