4.6 Article

Prey availability and ambient temperature influence carrion persistence in the boreal forest

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
卷 89, 期 9, 页码 2156-2167

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13275

关键词

boreal forest; carrion; community ecology; food web; nutrient cycling; scavenging

资金

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Northern Studies Training Program
  3. University of Alberta Northern Research Award program
  4. Association of Canadian Universities for Northern Studies
  5. Wildlife Conservation Society Canada
  6. W. Garfield Weston Foundation
  7. Killam Laureates program
  8. Vanier Graduate Scholarship
  9. Earth Rangers

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Scavenging by vertebrates can have important impacts on food web stability and persistence, and can alter the distribution of nutrients throughout the landscape. However, scavenging communities have been understudied in most regions around the globe, and we lack understanding of the biotic drivers of vertebrate scavenging dynamics. In this paper, we examined how changes in prey density and carrion biomass caused by population cycles of a primary prey species, the snowshoe hareLepus americanus, influence scavenging communities in the northern boreal forest. We further examined the impact of habitat and temperature on scavenging dynamics. We monitored the persistence time, time until first scavenger, and number of species scavenging experimentally-placed hare carcasses over four consecutive years in the southwestern Yukon. We simultaneously monitored hare density and carrion biomass to examine their influence relative to temperature, habitat, and seasonal effects. For the primary scavengers, we developed species-specific scavenging models to determine variation on the effects of these factors across species, and determine which species may be driving temporal patterns in the entire community. We found that the efficiency of the scavenging community was affected by hare density, with carcass persistence decreasing when snowshoe hare densities declined, mainly due to increased scavenging rates by Canada lynxLynx canadensis. However, prey density did not influence the number of species scavenging a given carcass, suggesting prey abundance affects carrion recycling but not necessarily the number of connections in the food web. In addition, scavenging rates increased in warmer temperatures, and there were strong seasonal effects on the richness of the vertebrate scavenging community. Our results demonstrate that vertebrate scavenging communities are sensitive to changes in species' demography and environmental change, and that future assessments of food web dynamics should consider links established through scavenging.

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