Validating the concept of top scavenger: the Andean Condor as a model species

Author:

Méndez Diego123ORCID,Vargas Félix Hernán3ORCID,Sarasola José Hernán45ORCID,Olea Pedro P.16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Ecología, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Calle Darwin 2, Madrid 28049, Spain

2. Aves Rapaces en Bolivia – Programa de Investigación. Calle El Villar 369, Sucre, Bolivia

3. The Peregrine Fund – Programa Neotropical, Calle Pingüino 52, Isla Santa Cruz, Galápagos, Ecuador

4. Centro para el Estudio y Conservación de Aves Rapaces en Argentina (CECARA), Universidad Nacional de La Pampa, Avda Uruguay 151, Santa Rosa, La Pampa 6300, Argentina

5. Instituto de las Ciencias Ambientales y de la Tierra de La Pampa (INCITAP-CONICET),Avda. Uruguay 151, Santa Rosa, La Pampa 6300, Argentina

6. Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Cambio Global (CIBC-UAM), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid,Calle Darwin 2, Madrid 28049, Spain

Abstract

Vultures provide the key ecosystem service of quickly removing carrion, so they have recently been assumed to be top scavengers. To challenge the concept of top scavenger (i.e. the most influential in the scavenging community and process), between 2012 and 2019, we recorded the consumption of 45 equine carcasses available for two different avian scavenger guilds in the Tropical Andes; each guild included the Andean Condor, the alleged top scavenger. The carcasses eaten by Andean Condors were consumed, on average, 1.75 times faster than those they did not eat. Furthermore, the greater abundance of feeding condors shortened carcass consumption time more than a greater abundance of any other species by 1.65 to 5.96 times, on average. These findings support the hypothesis that the Andean Condor significantly drives scavenging dynamics and is, therefore, an unrestricted top scavenger. Additionally, we established a gradient of tolerance of avian scavengers to domestic dog disturbance at carcasses, from highest to lowest: vultures > caracaras > condors. Our study framework holds great potential for advancing in food webs’ comprehension through quantifying the relative functional role of scavenging communities’ members and for guiding efforts to weigh up the ecological contributions of top scavengers and foster their conservation.

Funder

Neotropical Bird Club

Peregrine Fund

International Foundation for Science

Rufford Foundation

British Ornithologists' Union

Publisher

The Royal Society

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