Ruble Dallas B, Verschueren Stijn, Cristescu Bogdan, Marker Laurie L
Cheetah Conservation Fund, Otjiwarongo 12001, Namibia.
Animals (Basel). 2022 Dec 14;12(24):3532. doi: 10.3390/ani12243532.
The restoration of ecosystems through trophic rewilding has become increasingly common worldwide, but the effects on predator-prey and ecosystem dynamics remain poorly understood. For example, predation pressure may impose spatiotemporal behavioural adjustments in prey individuals, affecting herbivory and predation success, and therefore potentially impinging on the long-term success of trophic rewilding through apex predator reintroduction. Predation risk might have detrimental effects on prey through displacement from water or other vital resources. We investigated how five species of African ungulates responded behaviourally to changes in predation risk, following cheetah releases in the system. We grouped ungulates by body size to represent preferred prey weight ranges of the cheetah and examined changes in visitation rates, duration of stay, and activity patterns at waterholes with and without cheetah presence. During cheetah presence, visitation rates of ungulates were low for medium-sized species but high for large-sized species, suggesting that the species within the cheetah's preferred prey weight range adjusted behaviourally to minimize waterhole visits. Visits to waterholes were longer for small- and large-sized ungulates with cheetah presence, possibly indicating increased vigilance, or a strategy to maximize water intake per visit while minimizing visits. We did not detect significant differences in circadian or seasonal activity in waterhole visits, which may be attributable to the need of ungulates to access water year-round in our semi-arid study system and where migration was impeded due to physical barriers (fencing). We recommend further research into the long-term behavioural consequences of trophic rewilding on prey populations and trophic cascades to assist the success of recovery programs and to minimize potential detrimental effects at target sites.
通过营养重引入来恢复生态系统在全球范围内越来越普遍,但对捕食者 - 猎物关系和生态系统动态的影响仍知之甚少。例如,捕食压力可能会使猎物个体在时空上进行行为调整,影响食草行为和捕食成功率,从而可能影响通过重新引入顶级捕食者实现营养重引入的长期成功。捕食风险可能会因猎物从水源或其他重要资源处撤离而对其产生不利影响。我们研究了在猎豹被引入该系统后,五种非洲有蹄类动物对捕食风险变化的行为反应。我们根据体型对有蹄类动物进行分组,以代表猎豹偏好的猎物体重范围,并研究了在有猎豹和没有猎豹的情况下,水坑处的访问率、停留时间和活动模式的变化。在有猎豹存在期间,中型物种的有蹄类动物访问率较低,而大型物种的访问率较高,这表明在猎豹偏好的猎物体重范围内的物种会进行行为调整,以尽量减少对水坑的访问。有猎豹存在时,小型和大型有蹄类动物对水坑的访问时间更长,这可能表明警惕性提高,或者是一种每次访问时最大化饮水量同时尽量减少访问次数的策略。我们没有检测到水坑访问在昼夜或季节性活动上的显著差异,这可能是由于在我们半干旱的研究系统中,有蹄类动物全年都需要获取水源,并且由于物理屏障(围栏)阻碍了迁移。我们建议进一步研究营养重引入对猎物种群和营养级联的长期行为后果,以帮助恢复计划取得成功,并尽量减少目标地点的潜在不利影响。