4.7 Article

Behavioral adjustments of African herbivores to predation risk by lions: Spatiotemporal variations influence habitat use

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 1, Pages 23-30

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/08-0606.1

Keywords

African large herbivores; ecology of fear; habitat selection; Hwange National Park; Zimbabwe; landscape of risk; lion; Panthera leo; resource selection function

Categories

Funding

  1. French Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres
  2. ANR Biodiversite [ANR-05-BDIV-013-01]
  3. Darwin Initiative for Biodiversity [162/09/015]
  4. Eppley Foundation
  5. Disney Foundation
  6. Marwell Preservation Trust
  7. Regina B. Frankenburg Foundation
  8. Panthera Foundation,
  9. Joan and Riv Winant

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Predators may influence their prey populations not only through direct lethal effects, but also through indirect behavioral changes. Here, we combined spatiotemporal fine-scale data from GPS radio collars on lions with habitat use information on 11 African herbivores in Hwange National Park (Zimbabwe) to test whether the risk of predation by lions influenced the distribution of herbivores in the landscape. Effects of long-term risk of predation (likelihood of lion presence calculated over four months) and short-term risk of predation (actual presence of lions in the vicinity in the preceding 24 hours) were contrasted. The long-term risk of predation by lions appeared to influence the distributions of all browsers across the landscape, but not of grazers. This result strongly suggests that browsers and grazers, which face different ecological constraints, are influenced at different spatial and temporal scales in the variation of the risk of predation by lions. The results also show that all herbivores tend to use more open habitats preferentially when lions are in their vicinity, probably an effective anti-predator behavior against such an ambush predator. Behaviorally induced effects of lions may therefore contribute significantly to structuring African herbivore communities, and hence possibly their effects on savanna ecosystems.

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