Predation Risk Influences the Diving Behavior of a Marine Mesopredator~!2009-08-31~!2010-01-25~!2010-04-29~!

Q2 Environmental Science Open Ecology Journal Pub Date : 2010-04-29 DOI:10.2174/1874213001003030008
M. M. Dunphy-Daly, M. Heithaus, Aaron J. Wirsing, J. Mardon, D. Burkholder
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

Exploring factors that influence diving behavior is critical to understanding energy budgets, habitat use, and exploitation rates of prey. Optimal diving behavior studies have focused primarily on trade-offs between oxygen recovery at the surface and energy intake at depth. General predictions from these models are often supported by empirical data, but a mismatch exists between theory and data that has led to increasingly complex models. Despite the importance of non- consumptive predator effects in terrestrial and marine communities, the possibility that predation risk induces changes in diving behavior has only recently been recognized. We tested whether pied cormorants (Phalacrocorax varius) modify their diving behavior in response to spatio-temporal variation in tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier) abundance in the relatively pristine seagrass ecosystem of Shark Bay, Australia. As theory predicted, cormorants reduced the duration of the most dangerous component of the dive cycle by reducing the proportion of time spent at the surface as predation risk increased, but only in the most dangerous habitat. Contrary to model predictions, cormorants accomplished this reduction by increasing dive durations while maintaining similar post-dive surface intervals (leading to lower diving rates). By implication, foraging cormorants may be working harder during high-risk periods and in high-risk habitats to minimize their exposure to predators at the surface. Our finding that cormorants modify their diving behavior in response to spatial and temporal variation in predation risk suggests that the effects of predators on diving species may be greater, and manifest through more pathways, than is currently appreciated. Future studies of diving species, including those considered "top predators," must explicitly consider the potential importance of predation risk. Furthermore, diving behavior as an index of patch quality should be used cautiously when divers are threatened by predators, which is often the case.
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捕食风险对海洋中掠食性动物潜水行为的影响
探索影响潜水行为的因素对于理解能量预算、栖息地利用和猎物的捕食率至关重要。最佳潜水行为研究主要集中在水面氧气回收和深度能量摄入之间的权衡。这些模型的一般预测通常得到经验数据的支持,但理论与数据之间的不匹配导致模型日益复杂。尽管非消耗性捕食者效应在陆地和海洋群落中很重要,但捕食风险导致潜水行为改变的可能性直到最近才被认识到。在澳大利亚鲨鱼湾相对原始的海草生态系统中,我们测试了斑鸬鹚(Phalacrocorax varius)是否会根据虎鲨(Galeocerdo cuvier)丰度的时空变化而改变其潜水行为。正如理论预测的那样,随着捕食风险的增加,鸬鹚减少了在水面上花费的时间比例,从而减少了潜水周期中最危险部分的持续时间,但这仅限于最危险的栖息地。与模型预测相反,鸬鹚通过增加潜水时间来实现这种减少,同时保持相似的潜水后水面间隔(导致较低的潜水率)。这意味着,在高风险时期和高风险栖息地觅食的鸬鹚可能会更加努力地工作,以尽量减少暴露于水面捕食者的风险。我们的研究发现,鸬鹚会根据捕食风险的时空变化改变它们的潜水行为,这表明捕食者对潜水物种的影响可能比目前所认识的更大,并且通过更多的途径表现出来。未来对潜水物种的研究,包括那些被认为是“顶级捕食者”的物种,必须明确考虑被捕食风险的潜在重要性。此外,当潜水员受到捕食者的威胁时,应谨慎使用潜水行为作为斑块质量的指标,这种情况经常发生。
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来源期刊
Open Ecology Journal
Open Ecology Journal Environmental Science-Environmental Science (all)
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期刊介绍: The Open Ecology Journal is an open access online journal which embraces the trans-disciplinary nature of ecology, seeking to publish original research articles, reviews, letters and guest edited single topic issues representing important scientific progress from all areas of ecology and its linkages to other fields. The journal also focuses on the basic principles of the natural environment and its conservation. Contributions may be based on any taxa, natural or artificial environments, biodiversity, spatial scales, temporal scales, and methods that advance this multi-faceted and dynamic science. The Open Ecology Journal also considers empirical and theoretical studies that promote the construction of a broadly applicable conceptual framework or that present rigorous tests or novel applications of ecological theory.
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