4.7 Article

Factors influencing scavenger guilds and scavenging efficiency in Southwestern Montana

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-83426-3

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  1. National Institutes of Health [1R01GM117617]
  2. Emerging Pathogens Institute at the University of Florida

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Scavenging of carrion by diverse species can shape ecological landscapes and provide ecosystem services, with factors such as seasonality, habitat features, and species diversity influencing the efficiency of scavenging. The study found that facultative scavengers played a larger role in carcass consumption compared to obligatory scavengers, and that the presence of growing turkey vulture populations may affect competition for carrion among scavengers in the ecosystem.
Scavenging of carrion shapes ecological landscapes by influencing scavenger population demography, increasing inter- and intra-specific interactions, and generating ecosystem services such as nutrient cycling and disease moderation. Previous research found the cues promoting, or the constraints limiting, an individual's propensity or ability to scavenge vary widely, depending on anthropogenic and environmental factors. Here we investigated differences in scavenging patterns in a complex scavenger guild in Southwestern Montana. We used camera traps established at 13 carcass sites to monitor carcass detection, visitation, and consumption times, during 2016-2018 and generalized linear models to explore the influence of carcass characteristics, habitat features, and seasonality, on carcass selection and scavenging efficiency. We found that scavenger species diversity was higher at higher elevations and in grassland habitats. Scavenging efficiency was influenced inter alia by seasonality, distance to water, and elevation. We found that most carcass consumption was via facultative scavengers (bears, wolves, magpies, Corvus spp.) rather than turkey vultures, the only obligate scavengers in the study area. However, growing populations of turkey vultures may lead to increased competition with facultative scavengers over carrion, and could have cascading effects on food webs in this ecosystem.

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