Predation Risk Drives Habitat‐Specific Sex Ratio in a Monomorphic Species,the Brown Hare (Lepus europaeus) |
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Authors: | Jan Hušek Marek Panek Piotr Tryjanowski |
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Affiliation: | 1. Faculty of Applied Ecology and Agricultural Sciences, Hedmark University College, Koppang, Norway;2. Polish Hunting Association, Research Station, Czempiń, Poland;3. Institute of Zoology, Poznań University of Life Science, Poznań, Poland |
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Abstract: | In dimorphic species, sexual habitat segregation is generally explained by the differences in nutritional needs or by a trade‐off between fulfilling food requirements and avoiding predation. However, it remains unclear whether predation risk is strong enough to drive the differences in habitat use between sexes as predicted by the predation sensitivity hypothesis. Here we test in a monomorphic species, the brown hare (Lepus europaeus), the prediction that abundance of the gender more sensitive to predation is higher in safer habitat. We used data on 1645 individually marked hares in western Poland during autumn–winter seasons of 1966/1967–1978/1979 to estimate sex‐specific annual survival rates. We analyzed the stomach contents of 134 foxes shot in 1965/1966–1994/1995 to evaluate fox predation on hares. Finally, we employed data on 26 790 hares live‐trapped in 1965/1966–1994/1995 to analyze hare sex ratio across habitats. We found that male annual survival rate was lower than that of females and that the predation risk by foxes on hares was lower in agricultural than forest habitat. Our finding, that males were more often trapped by nets in agricultural than the forest habitat, provides indirect evidence for the predation sensitivity hypothesis. We conclude that predation risk can be a driving force for habitat‐specific sex ratio in a monomorphic species such as the brown hare. |
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Keywords: | agricultural habitat forest lagomorph predation sensitivity hypothesis red fox sex ratio |
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