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Fear and lethality in snowshoe hares: the deadly effects of non‐consumptive predation risk
Authors:Kirsty J MacLeod  Charles J Krebs  Rudy Boonstra  Michael J Sheriff
Institution:1. http://orcid.org/0000‐0003‐4901‐3809;2. Dept of Ecosystem Science and Management, Pennsylvania State Univ., Forest Resources Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA;3. Dept of Biology, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA;4. Dept of Zoology, Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada;5. Centre of the Neurobiology of Stress, Dept of Biological Sciences, Univ. of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, ON, Canada;6. http://orcid.org/0000‐0001‐5230‐2877;7. Huck Inst. of the Life Sciences, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA, USA
Abstract:Predators play a critical, top–down role in shaping ecosystems, driving prey population and community dynamics. Traditionally, studies of predator‐prey interactions have focused on direct effects of predators, namely the killing of prey. More recently, the non‐consumptive effects of predation risk are being appreciated; e.g. the ‘ecology of fear’. Prey responses to predation risk can be morphological, behavioural, and physiological, and are assumed to come at a cost to prey fitness. However, few studies have examined the relationship between predation risk and survival in wild animals. We tested the hypothesis that predation risk itself could reduce survival in wild‐caught snowshoe hares. We exposed female snowshoe hares to a simulated predator (a trained dog) during gestation only, and measured adult survival and, in surviving females, their ability to successfully wean offspring. We show for the first time in a wild mammal that the risk of predation can itself be lethal. Predation risk reduced adult female survival by 30%, and had trans‐generational effects, reducing offspring survival to weaning by over 85% – even though the period of risk ended at birth. As a consequence of these effects the predator‐exposed group experienced a decrease in number, while the control group substantially increased. Challenges remain in determining the importance of risk‐induced mortality in natural field settings; however, our findings show that non‐lethal predator encounters can influence survival of both adults and offspring. Future work is needed to test these effects in free‐living animals.
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