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Fear of the dark? A mesopredator mitigates large carnivore risk through nocturnality, but humans moderate the interaction (CROSBI ID 310751)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Haswell, Peter M. ; Kusak, Josip ; Jones, Katherine A. ; Hayward, Matt W. Fear of the dark? A mesopredator mitigates large carnivore risk through nocturnality, but humans moderate the interaction // Behavioral ecology and sociobiology, 74 (2020), 62; 1-9. doi: 10.1007/s00265-020-02831-2

Podaci o odgovornosti

Haswell, Peter M. ; Kusak, Josip ; Jones, Katherine A. ; Hayward, Matt W.

engleski

Fear of the dark? A mesopredator mitigates large carnivore risk through nocturnality, but humans moderate the interaction

While constrained by endogenous rhythms, morphology and ecology, animals may still exhibit flexible activity patterns in response to risk. Temporal avoidance of interspecific aggression can enable access to resources without spatial exclusion. Apex predators, including humans, can affect mesopredator activity patterns. Human context might also modify temporal interactions between predators. We explored activity patterns, nocturnality and the effects of human activity upon a guild of carnivores (grey wolf, Canis lupus ; Eurasian lynx, Lynx lynx ; red fox, Vulpes vulpes) using travel routes in Plitvice Lakes National Park, Croatia. Humans were diurnal, foxes nocturnal and large carnivores active during the night, immediately after sunrise and before sunset. Carnivore activity patterns overlapped greatly and to a similar extent for all pairings. Activity curves followed expectations based on interspecific killing, with activity peaks coinciding where body size differences were small (wolf and lynx) but not when they were intermediate (foxes to large carnivores). Carnivore activity, particularly fox, overlapped much less with that of diurnal humans. Foxes responded to higher large carnivore activity by being more nocturnal. Low light levels likely provide safer conditions by reducing the visual detectability of mesopredators. The nocturnal effect of large carnivores was however moderated and reduced by human activity. This could perhaps be due to temporal shielding or interference with risk cues. Subtle temporal avoidance and nocturnality may enable mesopredators to cope with interspecific aggression at shared spatial resources. Higher human activity moderated the effects of top-down temporal suppression which could consequently affect the trophic interactions of mesopredators.

Coexistence ; Mesopredator suppression ; Mesopredator release ; Diel activity ; Anthropogenic disturbance ; Red fox

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Podaci o izdanju

74 (62)

2020.

1-9

objavljeno

0340-5443

10.1007/s00265-020-02831-2

Povezanost rada

Biologija

Poveznice
Indeksiranost