4.2 Article

Cascading carrion: Opportunistic predation at deer gut piles

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FOOD WEBS
卷 37, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.fooweb.2023.e00313

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Hunting; Offal; Predator-prey; Remote camera; Scavengers; White-tailed deer

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Carrion, especially in the form of gut piles, is an important but overlooked aspect of food web ecology. The Offal Wildlife Watching project aims to understand how scavenger species benefit from offal and interact with each other. Through citizen science efforts, over 230,000 images of scavengers at deer gut piles have been collected and analyzed. The interactions observed, such as owls and bobcats scavenging and preying on rodents attracted to the gut piles, may have implications for predator-prey dynamics.
Carrion is increasingly recognized as an important part of food web ecology that impacts multiple trophic levels and creates an arena for multiple species interactions. The pulsed nature of hunter-derived carrion, in the form of gut piles, is a form of carrion that has been overlooked in the study of food webs and scavenger interaction. The Offal Wildlife Watching project aims to better understand scavenger species that benefit from offal and how they interact with each other and this resource. Through citizen science efforts by hunters and Zooniverse volunteers, we have collected and analyzed over 230,000 images of scavengers at white-tailed deer gut piles. At some gut piles, we have observed barred owls and bobcats both scavenging at hunter provided gut piles and preying on rodents that were also attracted to the gut pile. This interaction, made possible by a food subsidy that is historically novel in time and space, may have implications for rodent populations, predator survival and fecundity, and the activity patterns of both. Continued research and investigation will shed light on the impacts of cascading carrion on species interaction.

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