Oliveira Teresa, Mattisson Jenny, Vogt Kristina, Linnell John, Odden John, Oeser Julian, Premier Joseph, Rodríguez-Recio Mariano, Belotti Elisa, Bufka Ludek, Černe Rok, Duľa Martin, Fležar Urša, Gonev Andrej, Herdtfelder Micha, Heurich Marco, Hočevar Lan, Hvala Tilen, Iľko Tomáš, Kont Raido, Koubek Petr, Krojerová-Prokešová Jarmila, Kubala Jakub, Kübarsepp Marko, Kusak Josip, Kutal Miroslav, Machciník Beňadik, Männil Peep, Melovski Dime, Molinari Paolo, Ornicāns Aivars, Pavlov Aleksandar, Prostor Maruša, Slijepčević Vedran, Smolko Peter, Tam Branislav, Krofel Miha
Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Trondheim, Norway.
J Anim Ecol. 2025 Jan;94(1):154-167. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.14228. Epub 2024 Nov 26.
The estimation of foraging parameters is fundamental for understanding predator ecology. Predation and feeding can vary with multiple factors, such as prey availability, presence of kleptoparasites and human disturbance. However, our knowledge is mostly limited to local scales, which prevents studying effects of environmental factors across larger ecological gradients. Here, we compared inter-kill intervals and handling times of Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx) across a large latitudinal gradient, from subarctic to the Mediterranean ecosystems, using a standardised dataset of predicted adult ungulate kills from 107 GPS-collared lynx from nine distinct populations in Europe. We analysed variations in these two foraging parameters in relation to proxies reflecting prey availability, scavengers' presence and human disturbance, to improve our understanding of lynx predation at a continental scale. We found that inter-kill intervals and handling times varied between populations, social status and in different seasons within the year. We observed marked differences in inter-kill intervals between populations, which do not appear to be driven by variation in handling time. Increases in habitat productivity (expressed by NDVI, used as a proxy for prey availability) resulted in reduced inter-kill intervals (i.e. higher kill rates). We observed less variation in handling (i.e. feeding) times, although presence of dominant scavengers (wild boars and brown bears) and higher human impact led to significantly shorter handling times. This suggests that kleptoparasitism and human disturbance may limit the energetic input that lynx can obtain from their prey. We also observed that the human impact on foraging parameters can be consistent between some populations but context-dependent for others, suggesting local adaptations by lynx. Our study highlights the value of large-scale studies based on standardised datasets, which can aid the implementation of effective management measures, as patterns observed in one area might not be necessarily transferable to other regions. Our results also indicate the high degree of adaptability of these solitary felids, which enables them to meet their energy requirements and persist across a wide range of environmental conditions despite the constraints imposed by humans, dominant scavengers and variable prey availability.
觅食参数的估计对于理解捕食者生态学至关重要。捕食和进食会因多种因素而有所不同,例如猎物的可获得性、盗窃寄生者的存在以及人类干扰。然而,我们的认知大多局限于局部尺度,这阻碍了对更大生态梯度上环境因素影响的研究。在此,我们利用来自欧洲九个不同种群的107只佩戴GPS项圈的成年猞猁所预测的有蹄类动物捕杀的标准化数据集,比较了从亚北极到地中海生态系统的大纬度梯度上欧亚猞猁(Lynx lynx)的捕杀间隔和处理时间。我们分析了这两个觅食参数与反映猎物可获得性、食腐动物的存在和人类干扰的代理指标之间的变化关系,以增进我们对大陆尺度上猞猁捕食行为的理解。我们发现,捕杀间隔和处理时间在种群、社会地位以及一年中的不同季节之间存在差异。我们观察到种群之间的捕杀间隔存在显著差异,这似乎并非由处理时间的变化所驱动。栖息地生产力的提高(以归一化植被指数(NDVI)表示,用作猎物可获得性的代理指标)导致捕杀间隔缩短(即捕杀率提高)。我们观察到处理(即进食)时间的变化较小,尽管优势食腐动物(野猪和棕熊)的存在以及更高的人类影响导致处理时间显著缩短。这表明盗窃寄生和人类干扰可能会限制猞猁从猎物中获取的能量输入。我们还观察到,人类对觅食参数的影响在一些种群之间可能是一致的,但在其他种群中则取决于具体情况,这表明猞猁具有局部适应性。我们的研究强调了基于标准化数据集的大规模研究的价值,这有助于实施有效的管理措施,因为在一个地区观察到的模式不一定能转移到其他地区。我们的结果还表明,这些独居猫科动物具有高度的适应性,这使它们能够满足自身的能量需求,并在人类、优势食腐动物和猎物可获得性变化等限制因素下,在广泛的环境条件下生存。