Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-2018
Publication Title
Ecology and Evolution
Abstract
Allocating resources to growth and reproduction requires grazers to invest time in foraging, but foraging promotes dental senescence and constrains expression of proactive antipredator behaviors such as vigilance. We explored the relationship between carnivore prey selection and prey foraging effort using incisors collected from the kills of coursing and stalking carnivores. We predicted that prey investing less effort in foraging would be killed more frequently by coursers, predators that often exploit physical deficiencies. However, such prey could expect delayed dental senescence. We predicted that individuals investing more effort in foraging would be killed more frequently by stalkers, predators that often exploit behavioral vulnerabilities. Further these prey could expect earlier dental senescence. We tested these predictions by comparing variation in age‐corrected tooth wear, a proxy of cumulative foraging effort, in adult (3.4–11.9 years) wildebeest killed by coursing and stalking carnivores. Predator type was a strong predictor of age‐corrected tooth wear within each gender. We found greater foraging effort and earlier expected dental senescence, equivalent to 2.6 additional years of foraging, in female wildebeest killed by stalkers than in females killed by coursers. However, male wildebeest showed the opposite pattern with the equivalent of 2.4 years of additional tooth wear in males killed by coursers as compared to those killed by stalkers. Sex‐specific variation in the effects of foraging effort on vulnerability was unexpected and suggests that behavioral and physical aspects of vulnerability may not be subject to the same selective pressures across genders in multipredator landscapes.
Recommended Citation
Christianson, David; Becker, Matthew S.; Brennan, Angela; Creel, Scott; Dröge, Egil; M'soka, Jassiel; Mukula, Teddy; Schuette, Paul; Smit, Daan; and Watson, Fred, "Foraging Investment in a Long‐Lived Herbivore and Vulnerability to Coursing and Stalking Predators" (2018). School of Natural Sciences Faculty Publications and Presentations. 36.
https://digitalcommons.csumb.edu/sns_fac/36
Comments
© 2018 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Available via https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4489
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.