Assessing the potential for intraguild predation among taxonomically disparate micro-carnivores: marsupials and arthropods

Author:

Potter Tamara I.1ORCID,Greenville Aaron C.123ORCID,Dickman Christopher R.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Desert Ecology Research Group, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

2. National Environmental Science Programme Threatened Species Recovery Hub, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

3. Long Term Ecological Research Network, Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

Interspecific competition may occur when resources are limited, and is often most intense between animals in the same ecological guild. Intraguild predation (IGP) is a distinctive form of interference competition, where a dominant predator selectively kills subordinate rivals to gain increased access to resources. However, before IGP can be identified, organisms must be confirmed as members of the same guild and occur together in space and time. The lesser hairy-footed dunnart ( Sminthopsis youngsoni , Dasyuridae) is a generalist marsupial insectivore in arid Australia, but consumes wolf spiders ( Lycosa spp., Lycosidae) disproportionately often relative to their availability. Here, we test the hypothesis that this disproportionate predation is a product of frequent encounter rates between the interactants due to high overlap in their diets and use of space and time. Diet and prey availability were determined using direct observations and invertebrate pitfall trapping, microhabitat use by tracking individuals of both species-groups, and temporal activity using spotlighting and camera traps. Major overlap (greater than 75% similarity) was found in diet and temporal activity, and weaker overlap in microhabitat use. Taken together, these findings suggest reasonable potential, for the first time, for competition and intraguild predation to occur between taxa as disparate as marsupials and spiders.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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