Food limitation reduces risk avoidance by prey, but does not increase kill rates in a simple predator–prey system

Author:

Molina Francisco J.1ORCID,Smith Justine A.2ORCID,Donadio Emiliano3,Middleton Arthur D.4,Pauli Jonathan N.5,Goheen Jacob R.1

Affiliation:

1. Program in Ecology and Department of Zoology and Physiology University of Wyoming Laramie Wyoming USA

2. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology University of California, Davis Davis California USA

3. Fundación Rewilding Argentina Los Antiguos Argentina

4. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California, Berkeley Berkeley California USA

5. Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology University of Wisconsin–Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractPrey often induce antipredator behaviors when balancing food acquisition against safety. The starvation–predation hypothesis (SPH) posits that, during food shortages, the risk of starvation requires prey to forego antipredator behavior to increase feeding rates. Such shifts in antipredator behavior may further increase the risk of predation and therefore kill rates by predators. We tested the SPH and its consequences for kill rates in a single large prey, single large predator system. In the Argentine Andes, we evaluated whether risk avoidance by vicuñas (Vicugna vicugna) decreased during periods of food scarcity. From three years of GPS relocations collected simultaneously from vicuñas and pumas (Puma concolor), resource selection functions revealed that vicuñas increased their exposure to pumas during nongrowing seasons by reducing the avoidance of canyons and increasing selection for meadows, both of which offer more food of higher quality than relatively safe plains. However, and despite vicuñas becoming more risk‐prone during nongrowing seasons, kill rates by pumas did not change between growing and nongrowing seasons. Contrary to evidence from mesocosm experiments, relaxation of antipredator behavior by prey did not translate into increased kill rates by predators. Our results enhance understanding of the interplay between food limitation and predator–prey interactions within ecosystems and may improve ecologists' ability to predict when and where behaviorally mediated trophic cascades are more likely to occur.

Funder

American Society of Mammalogists

Fulbright Commission

National Geographic Society

Rufford Foundation

University of Wyoming

Wildlife Conservation Society

Institute for Biospheric Studies, Yale University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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