Department of Animal Science and Graduate Group in Ecology, University of California, Davis, California, USA.
Golden Gate Raptor Observatory, Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, San Francisco, California, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Sep;93(9):1176-1191. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14122. Epub 2024 Jun 16.
During animal migration, ephemeral communities of taxa at all trophic levels co-occur over space and time. The interactions between predators and prey along migration corridors are ecologically and evolutionarily significant. However, these interactions remain understudied in terrestrial systems and warrant further investigations using novel approaches. We investigated the predator-prey interactions between a migrating avivorous predator and ephemeral avian prey community in the fall migration season. We tested for associations between avian traits and prey selection and hypothesized that prey traits (i.e. relative size, flocking behaviour, habitat, migration tendency and availability) would influence prey selection by a sexually dimorphic raptor on migration. To document prey consumption, we sampled trace prey DNA from beaks and talons of migrating sharp-shinned hawks Accipiter striatus (n = 588). We determined prey availability in the ephemeral avian community by extracting weekly abundance indices from eBird Status and Trends data. We used discrete choice models to assess prey selection and visualized the frequency of prey in diet and availability on the landscape over the fall migration season. Using eDNA metabarcoding, we detected prey species on 94.1% of the hawks sampled (n = 525/588) comprising 1396 prey species detections from 65 prey species. Prey frequency in diet and eBird relative abundance of prey species were correlated over the migration season for top-selected prey species, suggesting prey availability is an important component of raptor-songbird interactions during fall. Prey size, flocking behaviour and non-breeding habitat association were prey traits that significantly influenced predator choice. We found differences between female and male hawk prey selection, suggesting that sexual size dimorphism has led to distinct foraging strategies on migration. This research integrated field data collected by a volunteer-powered raptor migration monitoring station and public-generated data from eBird to reveal elusive predator-prey dynamics occurring in an ephemeral raptor-songbird community during fall migration. Understanding dynamic raptor-songbird interactions along migration routes remains a relatively unexplored frontier in animal ecology and is necessary for the conservation and management efforts of migratory and resident communities.
在动物迁徙过程中,所有营养级的临时性分类群在空间和时间上共同出现。在迁徙走廊上,捕食者和猎物之间的相互作用在生态和进化上都具有重要意义。然而,这些相互作用在陆地系统中仍未得到充分研究,需要使用新的方法进一步研究。我们调查了迁徙性食虫捕食者和秋季迁徙季节短暂鸟类猎物群落之间的捕食者-猎物相互作用。我们测试了鸟类特征与猎物选择之间的关联,并假设猎物特征(即相对大小、集群行为、栖息地、迁徙倾向和可利用性)将影响性二态猛禽在迁徙过程中的猎物选择。为了记录猎物消耗,我们从迁徙的红隼 Accipiter striatus 的喙和爪中采样了痕量猎物 DNA(n=588)。我们通过从 eBird 状态和趋势数据中提取每周丰度指数来确定短暂鸟类群落中猎物的可利用性。我们使用离散选择模型评估猎物选择,并在秋季迁徙季节期间可视化猎物在饮食中的频率和景观上的可利用性。使用 eDNA 宏条形码技术,我们在 94.1%的采样鹰(n=525/588)上检测到了猎物物种,其中包括 65 种猎物物种的 1396 个猎物物种检测。在整个迁徙季节,饮食中猎物的频率和 eBird 中猎物物种的相对丰度之间存在相关性,这表明在秋季,猎物的可利用性是猛禽-鸣禽相互作用的一个重要组成部分。猎物大小、集群行为和非繁殖栖息地的关联是影响捕食者选择的猎物特征。我们发现雌性和雄性鹰的猎物选择存在差异,这表明性大小二态性导致了在迁徙过程中不同的觅食策略。这项研究整合了由志愿者管理的猛禽迁徙监测站收集的实地数据和 eBird 生成的公共数据,揭示了在秋季迁徙期间短暂的猛禽-鸣禽群落中发生的难以捉摸的捕食者-猎物动态。了解迁徙路线上动态的猛禽-鸣禽相互作用仍然是动物生态学中一个相对未被探索的前沿领域,对于保护和管理迁徙和常驻社区都是必要的。