Cunningham Calum X, Windell Rebecca, Satterfield Lauren C, Wirsing Aaron J, Newsome Thomas M, Ganz Taylor R, Prugh Laura R
School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
School of Natural Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Ecology. 2025 May;106(5):e70090. doi: 10.1002/ecy.70090.
Large carnivores can influence smaller scavengers through both positive and negative interactions (e.g., carrion provisioning and intraguild killing) and ultimately shape scavenging efficiency. However, we know little about this trade-off in anthropogenic landscapes where humans kill carnivores and provide carrion subsidies. In the context of wolf (Canis lupus) recolonization of human-impacted landscapes in Washington, USA, we investigated how sources of ungulate mortality (wolves, cougars [Puma concolor], and vehicles) shape scavenging efficiency, community-wide carcass visitations, and the strategies used by scavengers to navigate risk-reward trade-offs. Cougar and wolf kills mostly occurred in areas with low-to-moderate human influence, whereas roadkill typically occurred in areas with high human impact. Wolves consumed their kills most rapidly (median <4.7 days), providing fewer scavenging opportunities than cougar- and vehicle-killed ungulates, which persisted longer (median = 8.9 and 12 days, respectively). Roadkill primarily attracted avian scavengers, whereas mammalian scavengers used roadkill to a lesser degree and did so by shifting to more nocturnal foraging. The absence in winter of turkey vultures (Cathartes aura) and black bears (Ursus americanus), which are obligate and apex scavengers, respectively, coincided with a seasonal increase in scavenging by most other species. The two mammalian mesocarnivores exhibited divergent strategies: Coyotes (Canis latrans) frequently scavenged but usually for short durations and with heightened vigilance at predator kills, whereas bobcats (Lynx rufus) visited carcasses less frequently but fed for longer durations and displayed low vigilance while scavenging. These results suggest a hierarchical decision-making process whereby scavengers first choose whether to forage at a carcass before fine-tuning foraging duration, using temporal refugia, or increasing vigilance. Predator recovery in human-dominated landscapes therefore adds complexity to the spatiotemporal landscape of risks and rewards, and outcomes for scavengers will likely depend on their propensity to scavenge and vulnerability to humans and large predators.
大型食肉动物可以通过正面和负面的相互作用(例如,提供腐肉和种内残杀)影响较小的食腐动物,并最终塑造食腐效率。然而,在人类捕杀食肉动物并提供腐肉补贴的人为景观中,我们对这种权衡却知之甚少。在美国华盛顿州人类影响的景观中狼(Canis lupus)重新定居的背景下,我们研究了有蹄类动物死亡的来源(狼、美洲狮[Puma concolor]和车辆)如何塑造食腐效率、整个群落对尸体的访问情况,以及食腐动物在权衡风险与回报时所采用的策略。美洲狮和狼捕杀的猎物大多发生在人类影响程度低至中等的地区,而路杀通常发生在人类影响高的地区。狼消耗猎物的速度最快(中位数<4.7天),与美洲狮和车辆捕杀的有蹄类动物相比,提供的食腐机会更少,后者持续的时间更长(中位数分别为8.9天和12天)。路杀主要吸引鸟类食腐动物,而哺乳动物食腐动物对路杀的利用程度较低,它们通过转向更多的夜间觅食来利用路杀。分别作为专性和顶级食腐动物的火鸡秃鹫(Cathartes aura)和黑熊(Ursus americanus)在冬季的缺失,与大多数其他物种食腐行为的季节性增加相吻合。这两种中型食肉哺乳动物表现出不同的策略:郊狼(Canis latrans)经常食腐,但通常持续时间较短,在捕食者捕杀的猎物处警惕性较高,而短尾猫(Lynx rufus)较少访问尸体,但进食时间较长,在食腐时警惕性较低。这些结果表明了一个分层决策过程,即食腐动物首先选择是否在尸体处觅食,然后再微调觅食持续时间、利用时间避难所或提高警惕性。因此,在人类主导的景观中捕食者的恢复增加了风险和回报的时空景观的复杂性,食腐动物的结果可能取决于它们的食腐倾向以及对人类和大型捕食者的脆弱性。