Foraging behaviour of predators in heterogeneous landscapes: the role of perceptual ability and diet breadth
Authored by der Werf W van, F J J A Bianchi, N A Schellhorn
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0706.2009.17319.x
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Abstract
Oligophagous and polyphagous predators are confronted with spatially and
temporally varying distributions of prey. Their species-specific
foraging strategies should be able to cope with this variability. Using
an individual based model, we explore how diet breath and the spatial
scale at which predators respond to prey affects their capture
efficiency in four heterogeneous prey landscapes, and combinations
thereof. We interpret the spatial scale of the predator's response as
perceptual range, and propose giving-up density as a proxy for diet
breadth. Foraging behaviour is evaluated for a total of 121 perceptual
range/giving-up density combinations, with four of them reflecting the
strategies adopted by real ladybeetle species. Foraging rules of
oligophagous ladybeetles were generally not very effective in terms of
attained predation rate when foraging in a single prey landscape, but
appear to be more effective when foraging in multiple prey landscapes.
This finding is compatible with the notion that oligophagous predators
do not adopt a foraging strategy that is especially adapted to a
specific prey landscape, but to multiple prey landscapes. Simulations
further indicated that there was not a `best' foraging rule that
resulted in the highest predation rates for a range of spatial prey
distributions and prey densities. The findings thus suggest that
strategies of four ladybeetle species are effective in generating
sufficient prey capture under a broad range of spatial distributions, rather than maximum capture under a narrower set of distributions.
Tags
Dispersal
time
Strategies
Responses
Coleoptera
Spatial-patterns
Prey density
Lady beetle
Aphid prey
Coccinellidae