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Predation landscapes influence migratory prey ecology and evolution

Journal

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION
Volume 36, Issue 8, Pages 737-749

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2021.04.010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Delta Science Fellowship (State Water Contractors)
  2. AFS J Frances Allen Award
  3. NOAA Cooperative Institute for Marine Ecosystems and Climate
  4. UCSC Hammett Fellowship Award
  5. Delta Science Fellowship (California Sea Grant)

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Migratory prey face spatially variable predation throughout their life cycle, requiring them to rely on social information and learning to compensate for inaccurate risk perception. The energetic demands of migration constrain antipredator responses, but migrants employ diverse strategies to balance risks and rewards. Human interactions with migratory prey can alter mortality risk and antipredator responses, which have implications for conservation and management efforts.
Migratory prey experience spatially variable predation across their life cycle. They face unique challenges in navigating this predation landscape, which affects their perception of risk, antipredator responses, and resulting mortality. Variable and unfamiliar predator cues during migration can limit accurate perception of risk and migrants often rely on social information and learning to compensate. The energetic demands of migration constrain antipredator responses, often through context-dependent patterns. While migration can increase mortality, migrants employ diverse strategies to balance risks and rewards, including life history and antipredator responses. Humans interact frequently with migratory prey across space and alter both mortality risk and antipredator responses, which can scale up to affect migratory populations and should be considered in conservation and management.

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