Premium
Savviness of prey to introduced predators
Author(s) -
Wallach Arian D.,
Ramp Daniel,
BenítezLópez Ana,
Wooster Eamonn I. F.,
Carroll Scott,
Carthey Alexandra J. R.,
Rogers Erin I. E.,
Middleton Owen,
Zawada Kyle J. A.,
Svenning JensChristian,
Avidor Ella,
Lundgren Erick
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1111/cobi.14012
Subject(s) - mesopredator release hypothesis , predation , apex predator , biology , sympatric speciation , mammal , predator , intraguild predation , ecology , coevolution
Abstract The prey naivety hypothesis posits that prey are vulnerable to introduced predators because many generations in slow gradual coevolution are needed for appropriate avoidance responses to develop. It predicts that prey will be more responsive to native than introduced predators and less responsive to introduced predators that differ substantially from native predators and from those newly established. To test these predictions, we conducted a global meta‐analysis of studies that measured the wariness responses of small mammals to the scent of sympatric mammalian mesopredators. We identified 26 studies that met our selection criteria. These studies comprised 134 experiments reporting on the responses of 36 small mammal species to the scent of six introduced mesopredators and 12 native mesopredators. For each introduced mesopredator, we measured their phylogenetic and functional distance to local native mesopredators and the number of years sympatric with their prey. We used predator and prey body mass as a measure of predation risk. Globally, small mammals were similarly wary of the scent of native and introduced mesopredators; phylogenetic and functional distance between introduced mesopredators and closest native mesopredators had no effect on wariness; and wariness was unrelated to the number of prey generations, or years, since first contact with introduced mesopredators. Small mammal wariness was associated with predator‐prey body mass ratio, regardless of the nativity. The one thing animals do not seem to recognize is whether their predators are native.