Vultures acquire information on carcass location from scavenging eagles
Authored by Adam Kane, Andrew L Jackson, Darcy L Ogada, Ara Monadjem, Luke McNally
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.1072
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Abstract
Vultures are recognized as the scroungers of the natural world, owing to
their ecological role as obligate scavengers. While it is well known
that vultures use intraspecific social information as they forage, the
possibility of inter-guild social information transfer and the resulting
multi-species social dilemmas has not been explored. Here, we use data
on arrival times at carcasses to show that such social information
transfer occurs, with raptors acting as producers of information and
vultures acting as scroungers of information. We develop a
game-theoretic model to show that competitive asymmetry, whereby
vultures dominate raptors at carcasses, predicts this evolutionary
outcome. We support this theoretical prediction using empirical data
from competitive interactions at carcasses. Finally, we use an
individual-based model to show that these producer-scrounger dynamics
lead to vultures being vulnerable to declines in raptor populations. Our
results show that social information transfer can lead to important
non-trophic interactions among species and highlight important potential
links among social evolution, community ecology and conservation
biology. With vulture populations suffering global declines, our study
underscores the importance of ecosystem-based management for these
endangered keystone species.
Tags
Competition
Dynamics
ecology
resource
birds
social information
Flight
Game
Food
Population declines