Emerson Luke D, Wittmer Heiko U, Elbroch L Mark, Kostoglou Kristal, Bannister Kimberley J, Psaila Jared J, Whisson Desley, Ritchie Euan G
Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Melbourne, Victoria, 3125, Australia.
School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington, 6140, New Zealand.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2025 Feb;100(1):327-350. doi: 10.1111/brv.13143. Epub 2024 Sep 11.
Through killing and instilling fear in their prey, large terrestrial carnivores shape the structure and function of ecosystems globally. Most large carnivore species have experienced severe range and population declines due to human activities, and many are now threatened with extinction. Consequently, the impacts of these predators on food webs have been diminished or lost completely from many ecosystems. Kill rates provide a fundamental metric for understanding large carnivore ecology and assessing and comparing predation within and across ecological communities. Our systematic review of large terrestrial mammalian carnivore kill rates reveals significant positive geographic (North America, Europe, and Africa) and taxonomic (grey wolf Canis lupus, puma Puma concolor, lion Panthera leo, and Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx) bias, with most studies apparently motivated by human-carnivore conflict over access to ungulate prey and wildlife management objectives. Our current understanding of the behaviour and functional roles of many large carnivore species and populations thus remains limited. By synthesising and comparing kill rates, we show that solitary carnivores (e.g. brown bears Ursus arctos and most felids) exhibit higher per capita kill rates than social carnivores. However, ungulate predation by bears is typically limited to predation of neonates during a short period. Lower per capita kill rates by social carnivores suggests group living significantly reduces energetic demands, or, alternatively, that group-living carnivores defend and consume a greater proportion of large prey carcasses, or may acquire more food through other means (e.g. scavenging, kleptoparasitism) than solitary hunters. Kill and consumption rates for Canidae - measured as kilograms of prey per kilogram of carnivore per day - are positively correlated with body mass, consistent with increasing energy costs associated with a cursorial hunting strategy. By contrast, ambush predators such as felids show an opposite trend, and thus the potential energetic advantage of an ambush hunting strategy for carnivores as body mass increases. Additionally, ungulate kill rates remain relatively constant across solitary felid body sizes, indicative of energetic constraints and optimal foraging. Kill rate estimates also reveal potential insights into trophic structuring within carnivore guilds, with subordinate carnivores often killing more than their larger counterparts, which may be indicative of having to cope with food losses to scavengers and dominant competitors. Subordinate carnivores may thus serve an important role in provisioning food to other trophic levels within their respective ecosystems. Importantly, kill rates also clarify misconceptions around the predatory behaviour of carnivores (e.g. spotted hyaenas Crocuta crocuta and wolverines Gulo gulo are often considered scavengers rather than the capable hunters that they are) and thus the potential impacts of various carnivore species on their ecological communities. Despite the importance of kill rates in understanding predator-prey interactions, their utility is not widely recognised, and insufficient research limits our ability to fully appreciate and predict the consequences of modified predation regimes, justify current management actions affecting carnivores, or inform effective conservation measures. Together with other important research on predator-prey interactions, robust kill rate studies that address the research deficiencies we highlight will provide a deeper understanding of the foraging behaviours and potential ecosystem impacts of many of the world's carnivores, thus aiding effective conservation and management actions.
通过捕杀猎物并向其灌输恐惧,大型陆生食肉动物塑造着全球生态系统的结构和功能。由于人类活动,大多数大型食肉动物物种的分布范围和种群数量都经历了严重下降,许多物种如今面临灭绝威胁。因此,这些食肉动物对食物网的影响在许多生态系统中已减弱或完全消失。捕杀率是理解大型食肉动物生态学以及评估和比较生态群落内部及不同群落间捕食情况的一项基本指标。我们对大型陆生哺乳动物食肉动物捕杀率的系统综述揭示了显著的正向地理(北美洲、欧洲和非洲)和分类学(灰狼Canis lupus、美洲狮Puma concolor、狮子Panthera leo和欧亚猞猁Lynx lynx)偏差,大多数研究显然是受人类与食肉动物在获取有蹄类猎物方面的冲突以及野生动物管理目标的推动。因此,我们目前对许多大型食肉动物物种和种群的行为及功能作用的理解仍然有限。通过综合和比较捕杀率,我们发现独居食肉动物(如棕熊Ursus arctos和大多数猫科动物)的人均捕杀率高于群居食肉动物。然而,熊对有蹄类动物的捕食通常仅限于在短时间内捕食新生幼崽。群居食肉动物较低的人均捕杀率表明群居生活显著降低了能量需求,或者说群居食肉动物会保卫并消耗更大比例的大型猎物尸体,或者可能通过其他方式(如食腐、偷窃寄生)比独居猎手获取更多食物。犬科动物的捕杀和消耗率(以每天每千克食肉动物捕食的猎物千克数衡量)与体重呈正相关,这与 cursorial 狩猎策略相关的能量成本增加相一致。相比之下,伏击型食肉动物如猫科动物则呈现相反趋势,因此随着体重增加,伏击狩猎策略对食肉动物具有潜在的能量优势。此外,独居猫科动物不同体型之间的有蹄类动物捕杀率相对恒定,这表明存在能量限制和最优觅食情况。捕杀率估计还揭示了对食肉动物群落内部营养结构的潜在见解,从属食肉动物通常比体型较大的同类捕杀更多猎物,这可能表明它们不得不应对被食腐动物和优势竞争者夺走食物的情况。因此,从属食肉动物可能在为各自生态系统内的其他营养级提供食物方面发挥重要作用。重要的是,捕杀率也澄清了围绕食肉动物捕食行为的误解(如斑鬣狗Crocuta crocuta和狼獾Gulo gulo常被视为食腐动物而非有能力的猎手),以及各种食肉动物物种对其生态群落的潜在影响。尽管捕杀率在理解捕食者 - 猎物相互作用方面很重要,但其效用并未得到广泛认可,研究不足限制了我们充分理解和预测捕食模式改变的后果、证明当前影响食肉动物的管理行动合理性或为有效保护措施提供信息的能力。与其他关于捕食者 - 猎物相互作用的重要研究一起,解决我们所强调研究不足的强有力的捕杀率研究将更深入地理解世界上许多食肉动物的觅食行为及其对生态系统的潜在影响,从而有助于采取有效的保护和管理行动。