Literature DB >> 34309013

Marginal support for a trophic cascade among sympatric canids in peripheral wolf range.

Nicholas L Fowler1, Todd M Kautz1, Tyler R Petroelje1, Clay M Wilton2, Kenneth F Kellner1, Daniel J O'Brien3, Bill Parsons4, Dean E Beyer5, Jerrold L Belant1.   

Abstract

Trophic cascades reportedly structure ecological communities through indirect species interactions. Though the predator-herbivore-autotroph relationship has received much attention, mechanistic evidence supporting intraguild trophic cascades is rare. We established 348 remote camera sites (1 August-5 September 2019) across 7 study areas of varying wolf (Canis lupus) density including one study area where wolves were absent in northern Michigan, USA. Using multi-species occupancy modeling at species-relevant spatial scales, we evaluated the hypothesis that increased wolf occurrence suppresses coyote (C. latrans) occurrence with corresponding increased red fox (Vulpes vulpes) occurrence mediated by landcover edge density, human presence, and temporal partitioning. Remote cameras recorded >600,000 images and included 6,370, 10,137, and 4,876 detections of wolves, coyotes, and foxes, respectively. Fox occupancy probability was more than three times as high (0.29) at camera sites where wolves were present, relative to sites wolves were absent (0.09). Pairwise species interactions supported expected size-based dominance patterns among canids and insignificant effects were directionally consistent with reported reduced strength of top-down effects in peripheral wolf range. Increased edge density also increased co-occurrence of coyote and wolves, likely a function of increased prey availability and refugia for coyotes. Though foxes occurred in spatial proximity to wolves, competition was limited by greater temporal partitioning than observed between coyotes and foxes who were spatially segregated. Collectively, our results provide marginal support for the reported trophic cascade among wolves, coyotes, and foxes wherein top-down effects may be reduced near the edge of current wolf distributions. As predators continue to recolonize portions of their historic range, knowledge of the effects on intraguild predators has implications for species management and predicting prey population responses. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  coyote; interference competition; intraguild; niche partitioning; red fox; wolf

Year:  2021        PMID: 34309013     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3494

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  1 in total

1.  Temporal refuges of a subordinate carnivore vary across rural-urban gradient.

Authors:  Rumaan Malhotra; Samantha Lima; Nyeema C Harris
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-09-21       Impact factor: 3.167

  1 in total

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