4.7 Article

Predator-mediated Allee effects in multi-prey systems

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 91, Issue 1, Pages 286-292

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/09-0286.1

Keywords

Allee effect; apparent competition; conservation; functional response; mountain ecotype woodland caribou; predator-prey interactions; Rangifer tarandus caribou; social organization; southeastern British Columbia, Canada

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Allee effects Call have significant consequences for small populations and understanding the Causal Mechanisms for such effects is important for guiding conservation actions. One proposed mechanism is through predation, in which a type II functional response leads to increasing predation rates as prey numbers decline. However, models to support this mechanism have incorporated only a single declining prey species in the functional response, which is probably all oversimplification. We reevaluated the potential for predator-mediated Allee effects in a multi-prey system using Holling's disc equation. We also used empirical data oil a large herbivore to examine how grouping behavior may influence the potential for predation-mediated Allee effects. Results based oil a multi-prey expression of the functional response predict that Allee effects caused by predation oil relatively rare secondary prey may not occur because handling time of the abundant prey dominates the functional response such that secondary prey are largely bycatch. However. a predator-mediated Allee effect can occur if secondary Prey live in groups and if, as the population declines, their average group size declines (a relationship seen in several species). In such a case, the rate at which the number of groups declines is less than the rate at which the Population declines. Thus the rate at which a predator encounters a group remains relatively stable, but when a predator kills one animal front smaller groups the predation rate increases. These results highlight the need to evaluate risks associated with potential changes in group size as populations decline.

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