TY - JOUR
T1 - Predator facilitation or interference
T2 - A game of vipers and owls
AU - Embar, Keren
AU - Raveh, Ashael
AU - Hoffmann, Ishai
AU - Kotler, Burt P.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments We thank the united states–Israel Binational science Foundation (grant # 2008163 to Burt P. Kotler and Joel s. Brown) for generous support of this research. this is publication # 815 of the mitrani Department of Desert ecology.
PY - 2014/4/1
Y1 - 2014/4/1
N2 - In predator-prey foraging games, the prey's reaction to one type of predator may either facilitate or hinder the success of another predator. We ask, do different predator species affect each other's patch selection? If the predators facilitate each other, they should prefer to hunt in the same patch; if they interfere, they should prefer to hunt alone. We performed an experiment in a large outdoor vivarium where we presented barn owls (Tyto alba) with a choice of hunting greater Egyptian gerbils (Gerbillus pyramidum) in patches with or without Saharan horned vipers (Cerastes cerastes). Gerbils foraged on feeding trays set under bushes or in the open. We monitored owl location, activity, and hunting attempts, viper activity and ambush site location, and the foraging behavior of the gerbils in bush and open microhabitats. Owls directed more attacks towards patches with vipers, and vipers were more active in the presence of owls. Owls and vipers facilitated each other's hunting through their combined effect on gerbil behavior, especially on full moon nights when vipers are more active. Owls forced gerbils into the bushes where vipers preferred to ambush, while viper presence chased gerbils into the open where they were exposed to owls. Owls and vipers took advantage of their indirect positive effect on each other. In the foraging game context, they improve each other's patch quality and hunting success.
AB - In predator-prey foraging games, the prey's reaction to one type of predator may either facilitate or hinder the success of another predator. We ask, do different predator species affect each other's patch selection? If the predators facilitate each other, they should prefer to hunt in the same patch; if they interfere, they should prefer to hunt alone. We performed an experiment in a large outdoor vivarium where we presented barn owls (Tyto alba) with a choice of hunting greater Egyptian gerbils (Gerbillus pyramidum) in patches with or without Saharan horned vipers (Cerastes cerastes). Gerbils foraged on feeding trays set under bushes or in the open. We monitored owl location, activity, and hunting attempts, viper activity and ambush site location, and the foraging behavior of the gerbils in bush and open microhabitats. Owls directed more attacks towards patches with vipers, and vipers were more active in the presence of owls. Owls and vipers facilitated each other's hunting through their combined effect on gerbil behavior, especially on full moon nights when vipers are more active. Owls forced gerbils into the bushes where vipers preferred to ambush, while viper presence chased gerbils into the open where they were exposed to owls. Owls and vipers took advantage of their indirect positive effect on each other. In the foraging game context, they improve each other's patch quality and hunting success.
KW - Behavioral tools
KW - Community ecology
KW - Optimal foraging
KW - Predator interactions
KW - Risk management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84896314928&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00442-013-2760-2
DO - 10.1007/s00442-013-2760-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 24481981
AN - SCOPUS:84896314928
SN - 0029-8549
VL - 174
SP - 1301
EP - 1309
JO - Oecologia
JF - Oecologia
IS - 4
ER -