4.5 Article

Recolonizing carnivores: Is cougar predation behaviorally mediated by bears?

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 10, 页码 5331-5343

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7424

关键词

Black bear; feral horses; intraguild competition; kleptoparasitism; mule deer; Puma concolor; scavenging; Ursus americanus

资金

  1. Nevada Division of Wildlife
  2. Pittman-Robertson Funds
  3. Wildlife Conservation Society
  4. University of Nevada, Reno, Agricultural Experiment Station
  5. Nevada Bighorns Unlimited-Reno chapter
  6. Nevada Wildlife Record Book
  7. Carson Valley Chukar Club
  8. Northern Nevada Chapter of the Safari Club International
  9. Nevada Division of State Lands-Lake Tahoe License Plate Grant
  10. Nevada Wildlife Heritage Fund
  11. U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Wildlife Research Center

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Conservation efforts have led to population increases and range expansions for some apex predators, impacting trophic cascades and foraging behavior. The recolonization of black bears in the Great Basin has influenced cougar foraging behavior, with higher bear densities reducing feeding bout durations and altering prey selection. Such interactions highlight the importance of studying the impacts of sympatric apex predators and dominant scavengers on shared resources in dynamic multipredator/scavenger systems.
Conservation and management efforts have resulted in population increases and range expansions for some apex predators, potentially changing trophic cascades and foraging behavior. Changes in sympatric carnivore and dominant scavenger populations provide opportunities to assess how carnivores affect one another. Cougars (Puma concolor) were the apex predator in the Great Basin of Nevada, USA, for over 80 years. Black bears (Ursus americanus) have recently recolonized the area and are known to heavily scavenge on cougar kills. To evaluate the impacts of sympatric, recolonizing bears on cougar foraging behavior in the Great Basin, we investigated kill sites of 31 cougars between 2009 and 2017 across a range of bear densities. We modeled the variation in feeding bout duration (number of nights spent feeding on a prey item) and the proportion of primary prey, mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), in cougar diets using mixed-effects models. We found that feeding bout duration was driven primarily by the size of the prey item being consumed, local bear density, and the presence of dependent kittens. The proportion of mule deer in cougar diet across all study areas declined over time, was lower for male cougars, increased with the presence of dependent kittens, and increased with higher bear densities. In sites with feral horses (Equus ferus), a novel large prey, cougar consumption of feral horses increased over time. Our results suggest that higher bear densities over time may reduce cougar feeding bout durations and influence the prey selection trade-off for cougars when alternative, but more dangerous, large prey are available. Shifts in foraging behavior in multicarnivore systems can have cascading effects on prey selection. This study highlights the importance of measuring the impacts of sympatric apex predators and dominant scavengers on a shared resource base, providing a foundation for monitoring dynamic multipredator/scavenger systems.

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