Kuntze Corbin C, Peery M Zachariah, Pauli Jonathan N
Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2024 Dec;93(12):2038-2050. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14166. Epub 2024 Aug 28.
It is widely recognized that predators can influence prey through both direct consumption and by inducing costly antipredator behaviours, the latter of which can produce nonconsumptive effects that cascade through trophic systems. Yet, determining how particular prey manage risk in natural settings remains challenging as empirical studies disproportionately focus on single predator-prey dyads. Here, we contrast foraging strategies within the context of a primary and secondary prey to explore how antipredator behaviours emerge as a product of predation intensity as well as the setting in which an encounter takes place. We studied the effects of spotted owls (Strix occidentalis) on two species experiencing asymmetrical risk: dusky-footed woodrats (Neotoma fuscipes; primary prey) and deer mice (Peromyscus spp.; alternative prey). Woodrats are most abundant within young forests, but predominantly captured by owls foraging within mature forests; in contrast, deer mice occur in high densities across forest types and seral stages and are consumed at lower per-capita rates overall. We deployed experimental foraging patches within areas of high and low spotted owl activity, created artificial risky and safe refuge treatments, and monitored behaviour throughout the entirety of prey foraging bouts. Woodrats were more vigilant and foraged less within mature forests and at riskier patches, although the effect of refuge treatment was contingent upon forest type. In contrast, deer mice only demonstrated consistent behavioural responses to riskier refuge treatments; forest type had little effect on perceived risk or the relative importance of refuge treatment. Thus, habitat can interact with predator activity to structure antipredator responses differently for primary versus secondary prey. Our findings show that asymmetrical predation can modulate both the magnitude of perceived risk and the strategies used to manage it, thus highlighting an important and understudied contingency in risk effects research. Evaluating the direct and indirect effects of predation through the paradigm of primary and secondary prey may improve our understanding of how nonconsumptive effects can extend to population- and community-level responses.
人们普遍认识到,捕食者可以通过直接捕食以及诱导代价高昂的反捕食行为来影响猎物,后者会产生非消费性影响,并在营养系统中层层传递。然而,确定特定猎物在自然环境中如何管理风险仍然具有挑战性,因为实证研究不成比例地集中在单一的捕食者 - 猎物二元组上。在这里,我们在主要猎物和次要猎物的背景下对比觅食策略,以探讨反捕食行为如何作为捕食强度以及遭遇发生的环境的产物而出现。我们研究了斑点猫头鹰(Strix occidentalis)对两种面临不对称风险的物种的影响:暗足林鼠(Neotoma fuscipes;主要猎物)和鹿鼠(Peromyscus spp.;替代猎物)。林鼠在幼林中最为丰富,但主要被在成熟林中觅食的猫头鹰捕获;相比之下,鹿鼠在各种森林类型和演替阶段都有高密度分布,总体人均被捕食率较低。我们在斑点猫头鹰活动高低不同的区域内设置了实验性觅食斑块,创建了人工的危险和安全避难所处理,并在整个猎物觅食回合中监测行为。林鼠在成熟林中和风险较高的斑块中更加警惕且觅食较少,尽管避难所处理的效果取决于森林类型。相比之下,鹿鼠仅对风险较高的避难所处理表现出一致的行为反应;森林类型对感知到的风险或避难所处理的相对重要性影响很小。因此,栖息地可以与捕食者活动相互作用,从而使主要猎物和次要猎物的反捕食反应结构不同。我们的研究结果表明,不对称捕食可以调节感知到的风险程度以及用于管理风险的策略,从而突出了风险效应研究中一个重要且未被充分研究的偶然性。通过主要猎物和次要猎物的范式评估捕食的直接和间接影响,可能会增进我们对非消费性影响如何扩展到种群和群落水平反应的理解。