posted on 2013-01-28, 00:00authored byJustin R. St. Juliana, Burt P. Kotler, Joel S. Brown, Shomen Mukherjee, Amos Bouskila
Background: While many studies have addressed a prey’s behavioural responses to predators,
very few have tested how the prey’s anti-predator behaviour changes as a function of predator
number.
Hypotheses: Encounter rate with predators should increase with increasing numbers of
predators, thus increasing the predation risk (a cost of foraging) for prey individuals. With
increased predation risk, prey animals should quit foraging sooner, and leave more resources
behind. Increased predation risk should also cause prey to devote more attention to predator
detection and less to foraging. This redirection of attention should result in lower harvest rates,
and a higher quitting harvest rate for the prey.
Organisms: Prey: Allenbyi’s gerbil, Gerbillus andersoni allenbyi, a psammophilic, 25-g desert
rodent. Predator: barn owl, Tyto alba.
Methods: We allowed gerbils to forage in a large outdoor aviary in Sede Boker, Israel, subject
to various risks of predation (i.e. in the presence of 0, 1, 2, or 3 barn owls). We measured gerbil
giving-up densities (GUDs), the amount of food left behind by gerbils foraging in artificial
resource patches. In each trial, resource patches were set up in different microhabitats with
different arrangements of seeds. Comparing GUDs between these resource patches provided
a gauge of the gerbils’ perceived risk of predation and apprehension (a forager’s redirection of
attention from foraging to predator detection).
Results: Gerbils had higher GUDs when owls were present. Furthermore, gerbils increased
their apprehensiveness when more owls were present in the aviary. The increase in gerbil GUD
with each additional owl was less than additive.
Funding
The research was funded by a United States–Israel Binational
Science Foundation grant #1999–109
History
Publisher Statement
The original version is available through Evolutionary Ecology at evolutionary-ecology.com
Citation
St Juliana JR, Kotler BP, Brown JS, Mukherjee S, Bouskila A. The foraging response of gerbils to a gradient of owl numbers. Evolutionary Ecology Research. 2011;13(8):869-878.