Food caching by a solitary large carnivore reveals importance of intermediate-sized prey

Author:

Allen Maximilian L1ORCID,Elbroch L Mark2ORCID,Bauder Javan M3ORCID,Wittmer Heiko U4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Illinois Natural History Survey, University of Illinois , 1816 S. Oak Street, Champaign, Illinois 61820 , USA

2. Panthera , 8 West 40th Street, 18th Floor, New York 10018 , USA

3. U.S. Geological Survey, Arizona Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona , ENR2 Rm N315, 1064 E. Lowell Street, Tucson, Arizona 85721 , USA

4. School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington , PO Box 600, Wellington 6140 , New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract Pumas (Puma concolor) are solitary large carnivores that exhibit high energetic investments while hunting prey that often take multiple days to consume. Therefore, pumas should behave in a way to maximize their energetic gains, including using caching, which is a behavior used by many mammal species to preserve and store food or to conceal it from conspecifics and scavengers to limit their losses. Yet pumas do not always cache their kills. In order to understand caching behavior, we used variables associated with the kills such as prey mass, search time, climate, and habitat to test 20 ecological models (representing four a priori hypotheses: food perishability, resource pulse, consumption time, and kleptoparasitism deterrence) in an information-theoretic approach of model selection to explore factors related to the caching behavior. Models were run with information from tracked radio-collared pumas in California over a 2.5-year period and identified a total of 352 kills. Overall, we documented pumas caching 61.5% of their kills, including 71.6% of Black-tailed Deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus), their primary prey in the study area. The model with a quadratic effect of adjusted mass of prey on puma caching probability had all of the empirical support (w = 1.00). Specifically, pumas were most likely to cache intermediate-sized prey, such as yearling and adult female deer, and also fed from cached kills for longer periods of time. Larger prey may be too large to easily cache, making it less energetically efficient—while small prey can often be consumed quickly enough to not require caching. This suggests that intermediate-sized prey may be the optimal size for caching, allowing a puma to feed for multiple days while not greatly increasing energetic output. The hypotheses we tested were not mutually exclusive and pumas caching their prey may occur for several reasons; nevertheless, our study demonstrated that pumas use caching to extend their foraging time and maximize energetic gains when preying on intermediate-sized prey.

Funder

California Department of Fish and Wildlife

California Deer Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference47 articles.

1. Seasonal variation in the feeding ecology of pumas (Puma concolor) in northern California;Allen;Canadian Journal of Zoology,2014

2. Feeding and spatial ecology of mountain lions in the Mendocino National Forest, California;Allen;California Fish and Game,2015

3. Can’t bear the competition: energetic losses from kleptoparasitism by a dominant scavenger may alter foraging behaviors of an apex predator;Allen;Basic and Applied Ecology,2021

4. Food caching by bears: a literature review and new observations for Asiatic and American black bears;Allen;Ursus,2021

5. Caching reduces kleptoparasitism in a solitary, large felid;Balme;Journal of Animal Ecology,2017

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