The landscape of fear has individual layers: an experimental test of among-individual differences in perceived predation risk during foraging

被引:13
作者
Dammhahn, Melanie [1 ]
Lange, Pauline [1 ]
Eccard, Jana A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Potsdam, Fac Nat Sci, Inst Biochem & Biol, Anim Ecol, Potsdam, Germany
关键词
activity; behavioural reaction norm; giving-up density; patch use; optimal foraging; personality; risk allocation; rodents; BEHAVIORAL SYNDROMES; MUSTELID PREDATION; PERSONALITY; ECOLOGY; VOLES; VARIABILITY; KESTRELS; MODELS; FIELD; PREY;
D O I
10.1111/oik.09124
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Perceived predation risk varies in space and time creating a landscape of fear. This key feature of an animal's environment is classically studied as a species-specific property. However, individuals differ in how they solve the tradeoff between safety and reward and may, hence, differ consistently and predictively in perceived predation risk across landscapes. To test this hypothesis, we quantified among-individual differences in boldness and activity and exposed behaviourally phenotyped male bank voles Myodes glareolus individually to two different experimental landscapes of risks in large outdoor enclosures and provided resources as discrete food patches. We manipulated perceived predation risk via vegetation height between 2 and > 30 cm and quantified patch use indirectly via RFID-logging and giving-up densities. We statistically disentangled among-individual differences in microhabitat use from spatially varying perceived risk, i.e. landscape of fear. We found that individuals varied in mean vegetation height of their foraging microhabitats and that this microhabitat selection matched the intrinsic individual differences in perceived risk. As predicted by the patch use model, all individual's perceived higher risks when foraging in lower vegetation. However, individuals differed in their reaction norm slopes of perceived risk to vegetation height, and these differences in slopes were consistent across two different landscapes of risks and resources. We interpret these results as evidence for individual landscapes of fear, which could be predicted by among-individual differences in activity and boldness. Since perceived predation risk affects when and where to forage, among-individual differences in fear responses could act as a mode of intraspecific niche complementarity (i.e. individual niche specialization), help explain behavioural type by environment correlations, and will likely have cascading indirect effects on lower trophic levels.
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 70 条
  • [1] Behavioral and morphological responses to perceived predation risk: a field experiment in passerines
    Abbey-Lee, Robin N.
    Mathot, Kimberley J.
    Dingemanse, Niels J.
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2016, 27 (03) : 857 - 864
  • [2] State-dependent risk-taking
    Barclay, Pat
    Mishra, Sandeep
    Sparks, Adam Maxwell
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2018, 285 (1881)
  • [3] Barton K., 2019, MUMIN MULTIMODEL INF, V1, P6
  • [4] Plastic response of fearful prey to the spatiotemporal dynamics of predator distribution
    Basille, Mathieu
    Fortin, Daniel
    Dussault, Christian
    Bastille-Rousseau, Guillaume
    Ouellet, Jean-Pierre
    Courtois, Rehaume
    [J]. ECOLOGY, 2015, 96 (10) : 2622 - 2631
  • [5] A practical guide to avoid giving up on giving-up densities
    Bedoya-Perez, Miguel A.
    Carthey, Alexandra J. R.
    Mella, Valentina S. A.
    McArthur, Clare
    Banks, Peter B.
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 2013, 67 (10) : 1541 - 1553
  • [6] The ecology of individuals:: Incidence and implications of individual specialization
    Bolnick, DI
    Svanbäck, R
    Fordyce, JA
    Yang, LH
    Davis, JM
    Hulsey, CD
    Forister, ML
    [J]. AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2003, 161 (01) : 1 - 28
  • [7] Interindividual variability in habitat use: evidence for a risk management syndrome in roe deer?
    Bonnot, Nadege
    Verheyden, Helene
    Blanchard, Pierrick
    Cote, Julien
    Debeffe, Lucie
    Cargnelutti, Bruno
    Klein, Francois
    Hewison, A. J. Mark
    Morellet, Nicolas
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 2015, 26 (01) : 105 - 114
  • [8] RULES OF THUMB FOR PREDATION HAZARD ASSESSMENT - PREDICTIONS FROM A DYNAMIC-MODEL
    BOUSKILA, A
    BLUMSTEIN, DT
    [J]. AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1992, 139 (01) : 161 - 176
  • [9] PATCH USE AS AN INDICATOR OF HABITAT PREFERENCE, PREDATION RISK, AND COMPETITION
    BROWN, JS
    [J]. BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 1988, 22 (01) : 37 - 47
  • [10] The ecology of fear:: Optimal foraging, game theory, and trophic interactions
    Brown, JS
    Laundré, JW
    Gurung, M
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1999, 80 (02) : 385 - 399