4.7 Article

The deadly effects of nonlethal predators

Journal

ECOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 11, Pages 2043-2048

Publisher

ECOLOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1890/11-0455.1

Keywords

caged predator; dragonfly larvae; Leucorrhinia intacta; metamorphosis; nonconsumptive predator effects; predation; predator-induced stress response; stress effects

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

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Nonconsumptive predator effects are widespread and include plasticity as well as general stress responses. Caged predators are often used to estimate nonconsumptive effects, and numerous studies have focused on the larval stages of animals with complex life cycles. However, few of these studies test whether nonconsumptive predator effects, including stress responses, are exclusively sublethal. Nor have they assessed whether these effects extend beyond the larval stage, affecting success during stressful life-history transitions such as metamorphosis. We conducted experiments with larvae of a dragonfly (Leucorrhinia intacta) that exhibits predator-induced plasticity to assess whether the mere presence of predators affects larval survivorship, metamorphosis, and adult body size. Larvae exposed to caged predators with no ability to attack them had higher levels of mortality. In the second experiment, larvae reared with caged predators had higher rates of metamorphic failure, but there was no effect on adult body size. Our results suggest that stress responses induced by exposure to predator cues increase the vulnerability of prey to other mortality factors, and that mere exposure to predators can result in significant increases in mortality.

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