Risky business: how an herbivore navigates spatio-temporal aspects of risk from competitors and predators
Understanding factors that influence animal behavior is central to ecology. Basic principles of animal ecology imply that individuals should seek to maximize survival and reproduction, which means carefully weighing risk against reward. Decisions become increasingly complex and constrained, however,...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding factors that influence animal behavior is central to
ecology. Basic principles of animal ecology imply that individuals should
seek to maximize survival and reproduction, which means carefully weighing
risk against reward. Decisions become increasingly complex and
constrained, however, when risk is spatiotemporally variable. We advance a
growing body of work in predator-prey behavior by evaluating novel
questions where a prey species is confronted with multiple predators and a
potential competitor. We tested how fine-scale behavior of female mule
deer (Odocoileus hemionus) during the reproductive season shifted
depending upon spatial and temporal variation in risk from predators and a
potential competitor. We expected female deer to avoid areas of high risk
when movement activity of predators and a competitor were high. We used
GPS data collected from 65 adult female mule deer, 35 adult female elk, 33
adult coyotes, and six adult mountain lions. Counter to our expectations,
female deer exhibited selection for multiple risk factors, however,
selection for risk was dampened by the exposure to risk within deer home
ranges, producing a functional response in habitat selection. Furthermore,
temporal variation in movement activity of predators and elk across the
diel cycle did not result in a shift in movement activity by female deer.
Instead, the average level of risk within their home range was the
predominant factor modulating the response to risk by female deer. Our
results counter prevailing hypotheses of how large herbivores navigate
risky landscapes, and emphasize the importance of accounting for the local
environment when identifying effects of risk on animal behavior. Moreover,
our findings highlight additional behavioral mechanisms used by large
herbivores to mitigate multiple sources of predation and potential
competitive interactions. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbs2w |