Abstract
ABSTRACTAnimals may exhibit various strategies to mitigate the adverse effects of phenological mismatch. In species experiencing coat colour mismatch, the effects of lost camouflage on the susceptibility to predation may be compensated for with other antipredator traits, such as altered foraging decisions, and may further depend on the intensity of risk. We artificially simulated coat colour mismatch and predation risk in wild-caught snowshoe hares and measured their forage intake rate of black spruce browse, intraspecific selection for forage quality, i.e., % nitrogen of browse, and resulting body mass loss across different risk levels, simulated by cover or lack thereof. We found that hares did not adjust their intake rate in response to mismatch, but hares in our high-risk treatment ate significantly more than hares in our low-risk treatment. Mismatched brown hares, however, selected for more nitrogen-rich forage than their matched brown counterparts. Mismatched white hares lost 4.55% more body mass than their matched white counterparts, despite not reducing their intake rate. Hares in our high-risk treatment lost 1.29% more body mass than those in covered enclosures. We suggest that the increased selection for nitrogen-rich forage observed in brown mismatched hares may occur to mitigate the body mass loss consequences of mismatch. Similarly, the increased intake rate of hares in clear roof enclosures relative to those in opaque roof enclosures may be a compensatory behavioural response to increased body mass loss. Our results highlight the potential indirect effects of coat colour mismatch on snowshoe hares, but also the corresponding behavioural mechanisms that may partially mitigate these effects.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference73 articles.
1. Climate change is affecting mortality of weasels due to camouflage mismatch;Scientific Reports,2018
2. Integrating plant stoichiometry and feeding experiments: state-dependent forage choice and its implications on body mass;Oecologia,2021
3. Barnier, F. , M. Valeix , P. Duncan , S. Chamaillé-Jammes , P. Barre , A. J. Loveridge , D. W. Macdonald , and H. Fritz . 2014. Diet quality in a wild grazer declines under the threat of an ambush predator. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 281.
4. Barton, K . 2020. Multi-Model Inference. R package version 1.43.17.