4.8 Article

Do native predators benefit from non-native prey?

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 11, Pages 1174-1180

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12496

Keywords

Additive designs; biotic resistance; enemy release hypothesis; invasive species; non-native species; novel prey; optimal foraging theory; predator-prey interactions; substitutive designs

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Funding

  1. UGa Office of VP for Research
  2. OSU's, School of Environment and Natural Resources
  3. Ohio Agricultural Research & Development Center

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Despite knowledge on invasive species' predatory effects, we know little of their influence as prey. Non-native prey should have a neutral to positive effect on native predators by supplementing the prey base. However, if non-native prey displace native prey, then an invader's net influence should depend on both its abundance and value relative to native prey. We conducted a meta-analysis to quantify the effect of non-native prey on native predator populations. Relative to native prey, non-native prey similarly or negatively affect native predators, but only when studies employed a substitutive design that examined the effects of each prey species in isolation from other prey. When native predators had access to non-native and native prey simultaneously, predator abundance increased significantly relative to pre-invasion abundance. Although non-native prey may have a lower per capita value than native prey, they seem to benefit native predators by serving as a supplemental prey resource.

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