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Climate and the landscape of fear in an A frican savanna
Author(s) -
Riginos Corinna
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of animal ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.134
H-Index - 157
eISSN - 1365-2656
pISSN - 0021-8790
DOI - 10.1111/1365-2656.12262
Subject(s) - herbivore , predation , ungulate , ecology , foraging , forage , habitat , biology , geography
Summary Herbivores frequently have to make trade‐offs between two basic needs: the need to acquire forage and the need to avoid predation. One manifestation of this trade‐off is the ‘landscape of fear’ phenomenon – wherein herbivores avoid areas of high perceived predation risk even if forage is abundant or of high quality in those areas. Although this phenomenon is well established among invertebrates, its applicability to terrestrial large herbivores remains debated, in part because experimental evidence is scarce. This study was designed to (i) experimentally test the effects of tree density – a key landscape feature associated with predation risk for African ungulates – on herbivore habitat use and (ii) establish whether habitat use patterns could be explained by trade‐offs between foraging opportunities and predation risk avoidance. In a K enyan savanna system, replicate plots dominated by the tree A cacia drepanolobium were cleared, thinned or left intact. Ungulate responses were measured over four years, which included years of moderate rainfall as well as a severe drought. Under average rainfall conditions, most herbivores (primarily plains zebra, G rant's gazelle and hartebeest) favoured sites with fewer trees and higher visibility – regardless of grass production – while elephants (too large to be vulnerable to predation) favoured sites with many trees. During the drought, however, herbivores favoured sites that had high grass biomass, but not high visibility. Thus, during the drought, herbivores sought areas where food was more abundant, despite probable higher risk of predation. These results illustrate that the ‘landscape of fear’, and the associated interactions between top‐down and bottom‐up effects, is not static, but rather shifts markedly under different conditions. Climate thus has the potential to alter the strength and spatial dynamics of behaviourally mediated cascades in large herbivore systems.

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