4.5 Article

White-tailed deer exploit temporal refuge from multi-predator and human risks on roads

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9125

Keywords

Canis latrans; Canis lupus; functional diversity; Lynx rufus; Odocoileus virginianus; predation; temporal partitioning; Ursus americanus

Funding

  1. Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act [W-1476-R]
  2. Michigan Department of Natural Resources [MIW-155-R Study 1.38]
  3. Safari Club International Foundation

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This study examines the effects of multiple predators on the temporal niche of prey, revealing that white-tailed deer fawns minimize mortality risk by avoiding predators during daytime. The study also finds that fawn predation rates in multi-predator systems are similar to those in single-predator systems, which could be attributed to functional redundancy among predators with shared behaviors.
Although most prey have multiple predator species, few studies have quantified how prey respond to the temporal niches of multiple predators which pose different levels of danger. For example, intraspecific variation in diel activity allows white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) to reduce fawn activity overlap with coyotes (Canis latrans) but finding safe times of day may be more difficult for fawns in a multi-predator context. We hypothesized that within a multi-predator system, deer would allocate antipredation behavior optimally based on combined mortality risk from multiple sources, which would vary depending on fawn presence. We measured cause-specific mortality of 777 adult (>1-year-old) and juvenile (1-4-month-old) deer and used 300 remote cameras to estimate the activity of deer, humans, and predators including American black bears (Ursus americanus), bobcats (Lynx rufus), coyotes, and wolves (Canis lupus). Predation and vehicle collisions accounted for 5.3 times greater mortality in juveniles (16% mortality from bears, coyotes, bobcats, wolves, and vehicles) compared with adults (3% mortality from coyotes, wolves, and vehicles). Deer nursery groups (i.e., >= 1 fawn present) were more diurnal than adult deer without fawns, causing fawns to have 24-38% less overlap with carnivores and 39% greater overlap with humans. Supporting our hypothesis, deer nursery groups appeared to optimize diel activity to minimize combined mortality risk. Temporal refuge for fawns was likely the result of carnivores avoiding humans, simplifying diel risk of five species into a trade-off between diurnal humans and nocturnal carnivores. Functional redundancy among multiple predators with shared behaviors may partially explain why white-tailed deer fawn predation rates are often similar among single- and multi-predator systems.

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