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Interactive effects of obligate scavengers and scavenger community richness on lagomorph carcass consumption patterns
Authors:Esther Sebastián‐González  José Antonio Sánchez‐Zapata  José Antonio Donázar  Nuria Selva  Ainara Cortés‐Avizanda  Fernando Hiraldo  Miguel Blázquez  Francisco Botella  Marcos Moleón
Institution:1. Departamento de Biología Aplicada, Universidad Miguel Hernández, , Orihuela, Alicante, Spain;2. Departamento de Biología de la Conservación, Estación Biológica de Do?ana, CSIC, , Sevilla, Spain;3. Institute of Nature Conservation, Polish Academy of Sciences, , Krakow, Poland;4. Centre for African Ecology, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, , Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:Carrion consumption patterns in vertebrate scavenger communities may be influenced by several interacting factors. We assessed the effects of the number of scavenger species and the presence of obligate scavengers (vultures) on carcass detection and consumption times, and the structure (nestedness) of the scavenger assemblage by exploring consumption patterns of lagomorph carcasses provided experimentally. Carcass detection and consumption times were strongly inversely related to vulture presence, whereas scavenger richness had a low contribution, except when interacting with vulture presence. However, none of the scavenger communities presented a nested pattern, perhaps because of the small size of lagomorphs, which prevents large numbers of scavengers and interspecific interactions occurring at one carcass. Our results suggest that scavenger species richness, especially the presence of vultures, increases scavenging efficiency.
Keywords:carrion  community structure  consumption time  detection time  Lepus spp    nestedness     Oryctolagus cuniculus     small carcass  vulture
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