The impact of food availability on risk-induced trait responses in prey

Author:

Sheriff Michael J1ORCID,Mancini Isabella1,Aguiar Olivia K1,DiNuzzo Eleanor R1,Maloney-Buckley Sophia1,Sonnega Sam1,Donelan Sarah C12

Affiliation:

1. Biology Department, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth , 285 Old Westport Rd. 02747, Dartmouth, MA , USA

2. Smithsonian Environmental Research Center , 647 Contees Wharf Rd., Edgewater, MD 21037 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Prey respond to predation risk by altering their morphology, physiology, and behavior, responses that may come at a cost to prey foraging and growth. However, their perception of risk may depend upon the environmental context in which the interaction occurs. Here, we examined how food availability influenced prey’s responses to a nonlethal but free-ranging predator. We used an experimental mesocosm set-up of an intertidal system of green crab (Carcinus maenas) predators and dogwhelk snail (Nucella lapillus) prey, with blue mussels as the basal resource. We measured individual Nucella risk-aversion behavior (summed value of their habitat use) and their growth throughout the 28-day experiment. We found that when Nucella were exposed to predation risk, they had greater risk-aversion behavior when food was available as compared to when food was not. We also found that risk-aversion behavior increased over time in all treatments but that individuals exposed to predation risk with food always had greater risk-aversion behavior. Nucella had significantly more growth when provided with food as compared to without. In treatments with food, snails exposed to predation risk had significantly reduced growth compared to those not exposed to risk. In treatments without food, predation risk had no effect on growth. Our results support the hypothesis that greater resource availability significantly increases individual risk responses and the costs of risk avoidance, thus food magnifies risk-induced non-consumptive effects. They provide insights into context-based predation risk effects and how individuals may prioritize safety versus foraging depending upon perceived risk, food availability, and the costs of responding.

Funder

International Women’s Fishing Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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