Predator home range size mediates indirect interactions between prey species in an arctic vertebrate community

Author:

Dulude‐de Broin Frédéric1ORCID,Clermont Jeanne2ORCID,Beardsell Andréanne2ORCID,Ouellet Louis‐Pierre2ORCID,Legagneux Pierre13ORCID,Bêty Joël2ORCID,Berteaux Dominique2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Département de Biologie, Centre d'Études Nordiques and Centre de la Science de la Biodiversité du Québec Université Laval, Pavillon Alexandre‐Vachon Quebec Quebec Canada

2. Chaire de Recherche du Canada en Biodiversité Nordique, Centre d'Études Nordiques, and Centre de la Science de la Biodiversité du Québec Université du Québec à Rimouski Rimouski Quebec Canada

3. Centre d’Études Biologiques de Chizé UMR 7372 CNRS‐La Rochelle Université Villiers en Bois France

Abstract

Abstract Indirect interactions are widespread among prey species that share a common predator, but the underlying mechanisms driving these interactions are often unclear, and our ability to predict their outcome is limited. Changes in behavioural traits that impact predator space use could be a key proximal mechanism mediating indirect interactions, but there is little empirical evidence of the causes and consequences of such behavioural‐numerical response in multispecies systems. Here, we investigate the complex ecological relationships between seven prey species sharing a common predator. We used a path analysis approach on a comprehensive 9‐year data set simultaneously tracking predator space use, prey densities and prey mortality rate on key species of a simplified Arctic food web. We show that high availability of a clumped and spatially predictable prey (goose eggs) leads to a twofold reduction in predator (arctic fox) home range size, which increases local predator density and strongly decreases nest survival of an incidental prey (American golden plover). On the contrary, a scattered cyclic prey with potentially lower spatial predictability (lemming) had a weaker effect on fox space use and an overall positive impact on the survival of incidental prey. These contrasting effects underline the importance of studying behavioural responses of predators in multiprey systems and to explicitly integrate behavioural‐numerical responses in multispecies predator–prey models.

Funder

Canada Foundation for Innovation

Canada Research Chairs

Kenneth M. Molson Foundation

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Polar Knowledge Canada

Natural Resources Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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