4.5 Article

Climate change does not decouple interactions between a central-place-foraging predator and its migratory prey

Journal

ECOSPHERE
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.4012

Keywords

climate change; herbivore migration; predator-prey interaction; rainfall; seasonality; Serengeti National Park; spatiotemporal trophic mismatch; spotted hyena

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG-Grakos 1121, DFG-Grakos 2046, EA 5/3-1, KR 4266/2-1]
  2. Fritz-Thyssen-Stiftung [SAW-2018-IZW-3-EpiRank]
  3. LeibnizInstitute for Zoo and Wildlife Research
  4. Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
  5. Stifterverband der deutschen Wissenschaft

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We investigated the impact of climate change on female spotted hyenas and their clans. The results showed that changes in rainfall volume affected the presence of migratory herds and maternal den presence, but hyenas exhibited high adaptability to these environmental changes.
Little is known about potential cascading effects of climate change on the ability of predators to exploit mobile aggregations of prey with a spatiotemporal distribution largely determined by climatic conditions. If predators employ central-place foraging when rearing offspring, the ability of parents to locate sufficient prey could be reduced by climate change. In the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, migratory species dominate mammalian herbivore biomass. These migratory herds exploit nutrient-rich vegetation on the southern plains in the rainy season and surface water in the northwest in the dry season. Female spotted hyenas Crocuta crocuta breed throughout the year and use long-distance central-place-foraging commuting trips to migratory herds to fuel lactation for >= 12 months. Changes in rainfall patterns that alter prey movements may decrease the ability of mothers to locate profitable foraging areas and thus increase their overall commuting effort, particularly for high-ranking females that have priority of access to food resources within their clan territory and thus less commuting experience. In hyena clan territories, this may be reflected by a decrease in migratory herd presence and a decrease in the presence of lactating females, as maternal den presence represents the opposite of commuting effort. We investigated the strength of the relationship between rainfall volume, migratory herd presence in three hyena clan territories, and the responses of lactating females to this climate/prey relationship in terms of maternal den presence, using an observation-based dataset spanning three decades. The probability of migratory herd presence in hyena clan territories increased with the amount of rainfall 2 months earlier, and maternal den presence increased with migratory herd presence. Rainfall volume substantially increased over 30 years, whereas the presence of migratory herds in hyena clans and the strength of the relationship between rainfall and migratory herd presence decreased. Hyenas thus adjusted well to the climate change-induced decreased the presence of migratory herds in their territories, since maternal den presence did not decrease over 30 years and still matched periods of high prey abundance, irrespective of female social status. These results suggest a high plasticity in the response of this keystone predator to environmental variability.

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