4.5 Article

Inferring predator-prey interactions from camera traps: A Bayesian co-abundance modeling approach

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9627

Keywords

detection probability; hierarchical modeling; N-mixture models; overdispersion; species interactions; zero inflation

Funding

  1. Smithsonian Institution's ForestGEO program
  2. Nanyang Technological University in Singapore
  3. University of Queensland
  4. National Geographic Society Committee for the Research and Exploration
  5. Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Award [9384-13]
  6. [DE210101440]
  7. Australian Research Council [DE210101440] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Predator-prey dynamics are fundamental to ecology, but studying interactions directly is difficult. We developed a Bayesian hierarchical model that can infer predator-prey interactions and account for differences and uncertainties. Using this model, we analyzed camera trapping datasets from tropical forest landscapes in Southeast Asia and estimated four predator-prey relationships.
Predator-prey dynamics are a fundamental part of ecology, but directly studying interactions has proven difficult. The proliferation of camera trapping has enabled the collection of large datasets on wildlife, but researchers face hurdles inferring interactions from observational data. Recent advances in hierarchical co-abundance models infer species interactions while accounting for two species' detection probabilities, shared responses to environmental covariates, and propagate uncertainty throughout the entire modeling process. However, current approaches remain unsuitable for interacting species whose natural densities differ by an order of magnitude and have contrasting detection probabilities, such as predator-prey interactions, which introduce zero inflation and overdispersion in count histories. Here, we developed a Bayesian hierarchical N-mixture co-abundance model that is suitable for inferring predator-prey interactions. We accounted for excessive zeros in count histories using an informed zero-inflated Poisson distribution in the abundance formula and accounted for overdispersion in count histories by including a random effect per sampling unit and sampling occasion in the detection probability formula. We demonstrate that models with these modifications outperform alternative approaches, improve model goodness-of-fit, and overcome parameter convergence failures. We highlight its utility using 20 camera trapping datasets from 10 tropical forest landscapes in Southeast Asia and estimate four predator-prey relationships between tigers, clouded leopards, and muntjac and sambar deer. Tigers had a negative effect on muntjac abundance, providing support for top-down regulation, while clouded leopards had a positive effect on muntjac and sambar deer, likely driven by shared responses to unmodelled covariates like hunting. This Bayesian co-abundance modeling approach to quantify predator-prey relationships is widely applicable across species, ecosystems, and sampling approaches and may be useful in forecasting cascading impacts following widespread predator declines. Taken together, this approach facilitates a nuanced and mechanistic understanding of food-web ecology.

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