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THE LIMITS OF ADAPTATION: HUMANS AND THE PREDATOR–PREY ARMS RACE
Author(s) -
Vermeij Geerat J.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.84
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1558-5646
pISSN - 0014-3820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01592.x
Subject(s) - biology , predation , arms race , predator , ecology , overexploitation , adaptation (eye) , crypsis , dominance (genetics) , race (biology) , zoology , history , biochemistry , botany , neuroscience , gene , economic history
In the history of life, species have adapted to their consumers by evolving a wide variety of defenses. By contrast, animal species harvested in the wild by humans have not adapted structurally. Nonhuman predators have high failure rates at one or more stages of an attack, indicating that victim species have spatial refuges or phenotypic defenses that permit further functional improvement. A new compilation confirms that species in the wild cannot achieve immunity from human predation with structural defenses. The only remaining options are to become undesirable or to live in or escape to places where harvesting by people is curtailed. Escalation between prey defenses and predators’ weapons may be restricted under human dominance to interactions involving those low‐level predators that have benefited from human overexploitation of top consumers.