Recolonizing Carnivores and Naïve Prey: Conservation Lessons from Pleistocene Extinctions

Author:

Berger Joel1,Swenson Jon E.2,Persson Inga-Lill3

Affiliation:

1. Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89512, USA, and Wildlife Conservation Society, Moose, WY 83012, USA.

2. Department of Biology and Nature Conservation, Agricultural University of Norway, Box 5014, N-As, Norway, and Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Tungastella 2, N-7485, Trondheim, Norway.

3. Department of Zoology, University of Oslo, Box 1040 Blindern, Oslo, Norway.

Abstract

The current extinction of many of Earth's large terrestrial carnivores has left some extant prey species lacking knowledge about contemporary predators, a situation roughly parallel to that 10,000 to 50,000 years ago, when naı̈ve animals first encountered colonizing human hunters. Along present-day carnivore recolonization fronts, brown (also called grizzly) bears killed predator-naı̈ve adult moose at disproportionately high rates in Scandinavia, and moose mothers who lost juveniles to recolonizing wolves in North America's Yellowstone region developed hypersensitivity to wolf howls. Although prey that had been unfamiliar with dangerous predators for as few as 50 to 130 years were highly vulnerable to initial encounters, behavioral adjustments to reduce predation transpired within a single generation. The fact that at least one prey species quickly learns to be wary of restored carnivores should negate fears about localized prey extinction.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference31 articles.

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3. J. A. Byers American Pronghorn: Social Adaptations and Ghosts of Predators Past (Univ. of Chicago Press Chicago IL 1998).

4. Anthropogenic extinction of top carnivores and interspecific animal behaviour: implications of the rapid decoupling of a web involving wolves, bears, moose and ravens

5. G. Coulson in Comparisons of Marsupial and Placental Behaviour D. B. Croft U. Ganslosser Eds. (Filander-Verlag Furth Germany 1996) pp. 158–164.

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