4.5 Article

Dynamic interactions between apex predators reveal contrasting seasonal attraction patterns

期刊

OECOLOGIA
卷 195, 期 1, 页码 51-63

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-020-04802-w

关键词

African lion; Carnivore intraguild interactions; Crocuta crocuta; Panthera leo; Spotted hyaena

类别

资金

  1. HERD project (Hwange Environmental Research Development) - ANR FEAR [ANR-08-BLAN-0022]
  2. CNRS
  3. RP-PCP platform
  4. Darwin Initiative for Biodiversity Grant [162/09/015]
  5. Eppley Foundation
  6. Disney Foundation
  7. Marwell Preservation Trust
  8. Regina B. Frankenburg Foundation
  9. Rufford Maurice Laing Foundation
  10. Panthera Foundation
  11. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation - FEDER [CGL2009-07301/BOS, CGL2012-252 35931/BOS, CGL2017-83045-R]
  12. ANR project FUTURE-PRED [ANR-18-CE02-0005-01]
  13. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-18-CE02-0005] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Apex predators such as spotted hyaenas and African lions interact in various ways, mainly resource-related during encounters, with lions dominating around carcasses in the wet season and encounters shifting to waterholes in the dry season. The study highlights two interference scenarios during dry-season encounters, showcasing the seasonal dynamics of predator interactions and the shifts in negative (interference competition) and positive (scavenging opportunities) interactions over the year.
Apex predators play important roles in ecosystem functioning and, where they coexist, intraguild interactions can have profound effects on trophic relationships. Interactions between predators range from intraguild predation and competition to facilitation through scavenging opportunities. Despite the increased availability of fine-scale GPS data, the determinants and outcomes of encounters between apex predators remain understudied. We used simultaneous GPS data from collared spotted hyaenas (Crocuta crocuta) and African lions (Panthera leo) in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, to determine the environmental conditions of the encounters between the two species, which species provoked the encounter, and which species dominated the encounter. Our results show that encounters between hyaenas and lions are mostly resource-related (over a carcass or around waterholes). In the wet season, encounters mainly occur at a carcass, with lions being dominant over its access. In the dry season, encounters mainly occur in the absence of a carcass and near waterholes. Movements of hyaenas and lions before, during, and after these dry-season encounters suggest two interference scenarios: a passive interference scenario whereby both predators would be attracted to waterholes but lions would leave a waterhole used by hyaenas because of prey disturbance, and an active interference scenario whereby hyaenas would actively chase lions from waterhole areas, which are prime hunting grounds. This study highlights the seasonal dynamics of predator interactions and illustrates how the relative importance of negative interactions (interference competition during the dry season) and positive interactions (scavenging opportunities during the wet season) shifts over the course of the year.

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