𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Foraging under uniform risk from different types of predators

✍ Scribed by T Liesenjohann; JA Eccard


Book ID
104497812
Publisher
BioMed Central
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
722 KB
Volume
8
Category
Article
ISSN
1472-6785

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✦ Synopsis


Background

Many animals live in environments where different types of predators pose a permanent threat and call for predator specific strategies. When foraging, animals have to balance the competing needs of food and safety in order to survive. While animals sometimes can choose between microhabitats that differ in their risk of predation, many habitats are uniform in their risk distribution. So far, little is known about adaptive antipredator behavior under uniform risk. We simulated two predator types, avian and mammalian, each representing a spatially uniform risk in the artificial resource landscapes. Voles served as experimental foragers.

Results

Animals were exposed to factorial combinations of weasel odour and ground cover to simulate avian and/or mammalian predation. We measured short and long term responses with video analysis and giving-up densities. The results show that previously experienced conditions cause delayed effects. After these effects ceased, the risks of both types of predation caused a reduction in food intake. Avian predation induced a concentration on a smaller number of feeding patches. While higher avian risk caused a delay in activity, the weasel odour shortened the latency until the voles started to be active.

Conclusion

We show that the voles differed in risk types and adjusted their feeding strategies accordingly. Responses to avian and mammalian risk differed both in strength and time scales. Uniformity of risk resulted in a concentration of foraging investment and lower foraging efficiency.


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Foraging under the risk of predation in
✍ Vytenis Gotceitas; Jean-Guy J. Godin πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1991 πŸ› Springer 🌐 English βš– 881 KB

Following exposure to a predator, socially dominant individuals may reduce their risk of predation by waiting until subordinates have resumed foraging before doing so themselves. Although such status-related ordering in the resumption of foraging activity has been observed in several bird species, t