4.5 Article

Cats and dogs: A mesopredator navigating risk and reward provisioned by an apex predator

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 12, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8641

关键词

coyote; encounter rate; intraguild predation; mountain lion; predation risk; scavenge

资金

  1. Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation
  2. Safari Club International Foundation
  3. Wyoming Game and Fish Department
  4. Wyoming Governor's Big Game License Coalition
  5. Muley Fanatic Foundation
  6. Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources
  7. Bowhunters of Wyoming
  8. Wyoming Animal Damage Management Board
  9. Wyoming Wildlife
  10. Natural Resource Trust

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Successfully perceiving risk and reward is crucial for animal fitness, and can be achieved through various perception tactics. Research indicates that mesopredators tend to use indirect perception to avoid apex predators rather than responding directly to the risk of encountering them.
Successfully perceiving risk and reward is fundamental to the fitness of an animal, and can be achieved through a variety of perception tactics. For example, mesopredators may directly perceive risk by visually observing apex predators, or may indirectly perceive risk by observing habitats used by predators. Direct assessments should more accurately characterize the arrangement of risk and reward; however, indirect assessments are used more frequently in studies concerning the response of GPS-marked animals to spatiotemporally variable sources of risk and reward. We investigated the response of a mesopredator to the presence of risk and reward created by an apex predator, where risk and reward likely vary in relative perceptibility (i.e., degree of being perceptible). First, we tested whether coyotes (Canis latrans) use direct or indirect assessments to navigate the presence of mountain lions (Puma concolor; risk) and kills made by mountain lions (reward) in an area where coyotes were a common prey item for mountain lions. Second, we assessed the behavioral response of coyotes to direct encounters with mountain lions. Third, we evaluated spatiotemporal use of carrion by coyotes at kills made by mountain lions. Indirect assessments generally outperformed direct assessments when integrating analyses into a unified framework; nevertheless, our ability to detect direct perception in navigating to mountain lion kills was likely restricted by scale and sampling limitations (e.g., collar fix rates, unsampled kill sites). Rather than responding to the risk of direct encounters with mountain lions, coyotes facilitated encounters by increasing their movement rate, and engaged in risky behavior by scavenging at mountain lion kills. Coyotes appear to mitigate risk by using indirect perception to avoid mountain lions. Our predator-predator interactions and insights are nuanced and counter to the conventional predator-prey systems that have generated much of the predation risk literature.

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