Estimating individual exposure to predation risk in group-living baboons, Papio anubis

Author:

Suire Alexandre,Kunita ItsukiORCID,Harel Roi,Crofoot Margaret,Mutinda Mathew,Kamau Maureen,Hassel James M.,Murray Suzan,Kawamura ShojiORCID,Matsumoto-Oda AkikoORCID

Abstract

In environments with multiple predators, vulnerabilities associated with the spatial positions of group-living prey are non-uniform and depend on the hunting styles of the predators. Theoretically, coursing predators follow their prey over long distances and attack open areas, exposing individuals at the edge of the group to predation risk more than those at the center (marginal predation). In contrast, ambush predators lurk unnoticed by their prey and appear randomly anywhere in the group; therefore, isolated individuals in the group would be more vulnerable to predators. These positions of vulnerability to predation are expected to be taken by larger-bodied males. Moreover, dominant males presumably occupy the center of the safe group. However, identifying individuals at higher predation risk requires both simultaneous recording of predator location and direct observation of predation events; empirical observations leave ambiguity as to who is at risk. Instead, several theoretical methods (predation risk proxies) have been proposed to assess predation risk: (1) the size of the individual ‘unlimited domain of danger’ based on Voronoi tessellation, (2) the size of the ‘limited domain of danger’ based on predator detection distance, (3) peripheral/center position in the group (minimum convex polygon), (4) the number and direction of others in the vicinity (surroundedness), and (5) dyadic distances. We explored the age-sex distribution of individuals in at-risk positions within a wild baboon group facing predation risk from leopards, lions, and hyenas, using Global Positioning System collars. Our analysis of the location data from 26 baboons revealed that adult males were consistently isolated at the edge of the group in all predation risk proxies. Empirical evidence from previous studies indicates that adult male baboons are the most frequently preyed upon, and our results highlights the importance of spatial positioning in this.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Science Foundation

Packard Foundation Fellowship

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Center for the Advanced Study of Collective Behavior at the University of Konstanz

DFG Centre of Excellence 2117

Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior

University of California, Davis

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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