Predation risk tradeoffs in prey: effects on energy and behaviour
Authored by Robin Gras, Marwa Khater, Dorian Murariu
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s12080-015-0277-5
Sponsors:
Canadian Research Council
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Canadian Foundation for Innovation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The complexity of behavioural interactions in predator-prey systems has
recently begun to capture trait-effects, or non-lethal effects, of
predators on prey via induced behavioural changes. Non-lethal predation
effects play crucial roles in shaping population and community dynamics, particularly by inducing changes to foraging, movement and reproductive
behaviours of prey. Prey exhibit trade-offs in behaviours while
minimizing predation risk. We use a novel evolutionary ecosystem
simulation EcoSim to study such behavioural interactions and their
effects on prey populations, thereby addressing the need for integrating
multiple layers of complexity in behavioural ecology. EcoSim allows
complex intra- and inter-specific interactions between behaviourally and
genetically unique individuals called predators and prey, as well as
complex predator-prey dynamics and coevolution in a tri-trophic and
spatially heterogeneous world. We investigated the effects of predation
risk on prey energy budgets and fitness. Results revealed that energy
budgets, life history traits, allocation of energy to movements and
fitness-related actions differed greatly between prey subjected to
low-predation risk and high-predation risk. High-predation risk
suppressed prey foraging activity, increased total movement and
decreased reproduction relative to low-risk. We show that predation risk
alone induces behavioural changes in prey which drastically affect
population and community dynamics, and when interpreted within the
evolutionary context of our simulation indicate that genetic changes
accompanying coevolution have long-term effects on prey adaptability to
the absence of predators.
Tags
Decision-Making
System
Population-dynamics
Habitat
selection
Food webs
Antipredator behavior
Trophic interactions
Fitness consequences
Adaptive-behavior
Mediated indirect interactions