4.2 Article

Individual snowshoe hares manage risk differently: integrating stoichiometric distribution models and foraging ecology

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
Volume 103, Issue 1, Pages 196-208

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jmammal/gyab130

Keywords

autocorrelated kernel density estimation; Bayesian; boreal forest; ecological stoichiometry; habitat complexity; individual responses; optimal foraging theory; perceived predation risk; risk allocation hypothesis; trade-offs

Categories

Funding

  1. Government of Newfoundland and Labrador Centre for Forest Science Innovation (CFSI)
  2. Memorial University of Newfoundland SEEDS funding
  3. Mitacs Accelerate Grant
  4. Canada Foundation for Innovation funding [13025]
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2015-05799]

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This study examines the trade-off between perceived predation risk and forage quality in snowshoe hares using ecological stoichiometry framework. The individual-level responses to forage quality and perceived predation risk vary, indicating fine-scale decision-making by hares.
Herbivores making space use decisions must consider the trade-off between perceived predation risk and forage quality. Herbivores, specifically snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus), must constantly navigate landscapes that vary in predation risk and food quality, providing researchers with the opportunity to explore the factors that govern their foraging decisions. Herein, we tested predictions that intersect the risk allocation hypothesis (RAH) and optimal foraging theory (OFT) in a spatially explicit ecological stoichiometry framework to assess the trade-off between predation risk and forage quality. We used individual and population estimates of snowshoe hare (n = 29) space use derived from biotelemetry across three summers. We evaluated resource forage quality for lowbush blueberry (Vaccinium angustifolium), a common and readily available forage species within our system, using carbon:nitrogen and carbon:phosphorus ratios. We used habitat complexity to proxy perceived predation risk. We analyzed how forage quality of blueberry, perceived predation risk, and their interaction impact the intensity of herbivore space use. We used generalized mixed effects models, structured to enable us to make inferences at the population and individual home range level. We did not find support for RAH and OFT. However, variation in the individual-level reactions norms in our models showed that individual hares have unique responses to forage quality and perceived predation risk. Our finding of individual-level responses indicates that there is fine-scale decision-making by hares, although we did not identify the mechanism. Our approach illustrates spatially explicit empirical support for individual behavioral responses to the food quality-predation risk trade-off.

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