期刊论文详细信息
Ecology and Evolution
Competition for safe real estate, not food, drives density‐dependent juvenile survival in a large herbivore
Mark A. Hurley1  Jean‐Michel Gaillard2  Mark Hebblewhite3 
[1] Idaho Department of Fish and Game Boise ID USA;Laboratoire Biométrie & Biologie Évolutive CNRSUMR‐CNRS 5558University Claude Bernard ‐ Lyon I Villeurbanne Cedex France;Wildlife Biology Program Department of Ecosystem Sciences and Conservation W.A. Franke College of Forestry and Conservation University of Montana Missoula MT USA;
关键词: habitat selection;    ideal despotic distribution;    ideal free distribution;    predation risk;    predator removal experiment;    ungulate;   
DOI  :  10.1002/ece3.6289
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Abstract Density‐dependent competition for food reduces vital rates, with juvenile survival often the first to decline. A clear prediction of food‐based, density‐dependent competition for large herbivores is decreasing juvenile survival with increasing density. However, competition for enemy‐free space could also be a significant mechanism for density dependence in territorial species. How juvenile survival is predicted to change across density depends critically on the nature of predator–prey dynamics and spatial overlap among predator and prey, especially in multiple‐predator systems. Here, we used a management experiment that reduced densities of a generalist predator, coyotes, and specialist predator, mountain lions, over a 5‐year period to test for spatial density dependence mediated by predation on juvenile mule deer in Idaho, USA. We tested the spatial density‐dependence hypothesis by tracking the fate of 251 juvenile mule deer, estimating cause‐specific mortality, and testing responses to changes in deer density and predator abundance. Overall juvenile mortality did not increase with deer density, but generalist coyote‐caused mortality did, but not when coyote density was reduced experimentally. Mountain lion‐caused mortality did not change with deer density in the reference area in contradiction of the food‐based competition hypothesis, but declined in the treatment area, opposite to the pattern of coyotes. These observations clearly reject the food‐based density‐dependence hypothesis for juvenile mule deer. Instead, our results provide support for the spatial density‐dependence hypothesis that competition for enemy‐free space increases predation by generalist predators on juvenile large herbivores.

【 授权许可】

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