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Habitat complexity dampens selection on prey activity level
Authors:Carl N Keiser  Spencer J Ingley  Benjamin J Toscano  Inon Scharf  Jonathan N Pruitt
Institution:1. BioSciences, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA;2. Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, NC, USA;3. Department of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel;4. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Abstract:Conspecific prey individuals often exhibit persistent differences in behavior (i.e., animal personality) and consequently vary in their susceptibility to predation. How this form of selection varies across environmental contexts is essential to predicting ecological and evolutionary dynamics, yet remains currently unresolved. Here, we use three separate predator–prey systems (sea star–snail, wolf spider–cricket, and jumping spider–cricket) to independently examine how habitat structural complexity influences the selection that predators impose on prey behavioral types. Prior to conducting staged predator–prey interaction encounters, we ran prey individuals through multiple behavioral assays to determine their average activity level. We then allowed individual predators to interact with groups of prey in either open or structurally complex habitats and recorded the number and individual identity of prey that were eaten. Habitat complexity had no effect on overall predation rates in any of the three predator–prey systems. Despite this, we detected a pervasive interaction between habitat structure and individual prey activity level in determining individual prey survival. In open habitats, all predators imposed strong selection on prey behavioral types: sea stars preferentially consumed sedentary snails, while spiders preferentially consumed active crickets. Habitat complexity dampened selection within all three systems, equalizing the predation risk that active and sedentary prey faced. These findings suggest a general effect of habitat complexity that reduces the importance of prey activity level in determining individual predation risk. We reason this occurs because activity level (i.e., movement) is paramount in determining risk within open environments, whereas in complex habitats, other behavioral traits (e.g., escape ability to a refuge) may take precedence.
Keywords:activity  habitat complexity  individual variation  predator–  prey interactions  selection
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