4.5 Article

Coursing the mottled mosaic: Generalist predators track pulses in availability of neonatal ungulates

Journal

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10378

Keywords

birth pulse; Canis latrans; coyote; Odocoileus hemionus; optimal foraging; resource tracking

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The density and distribution of resources shape animal movement and behavior, which affect population dynamics. This study examined the movements and resource selection of coyotes across different reproductive stages of female mule deer in southwest Wyoming, USA. The findings indicate that coyotes select areas with a high probability of use by female mule deer, particularly during peak parturition, and also intensify their searching behavior during pulses of availability of deer neonates.
The density and distribution of resources shape animal movement and behavior and have direct implications for population dynamics. Resource availability often is pulsed in space and time, and individuals should cue in on resource pulses when the energetic gain of doing so exceeds that of stable resources. Birth pulses of prey represent a profitable but ephemeral resource and should thereby result in shifting functional responses by predators. We evaluated movements and resource selection of coyotes (Canis latrans) across a gradient of reproductive stages ranging from late gestation to peak lactation of female mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) in southwest Wyoming, USA, to test whether coyotes exhibited shifts in selection and movement behavior relative to the availability and vulnerability of neonatal mule deer. We expected coyotes to track pulses in availability of neonatal mule deer, and such behavior would be represented by shifts in resource selection and search behavior of coyotes that would be strongest during peak parturition of mule deer. Coyotes selected areas of high relative probability of use by female mule deer and did so most strongly during peak parturition. Furthermore, searching behavior of coyotes intensified during pulses of availability of deer neonates. Our findings support the notion that coyotes exploit pulses of neonatal deer, presumably as an attempt to capitalize on a vulnerable, energy-rich resource. Our work quantifies the behavioral mechanisms by which coyotes consume ungulate neonates and provides one of the first examples of a mammalian predator-prey system centered on a pulsed resource.

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