» Articles » PMID: 28307103

The Effect of Barn Owls (Tyto Alba) on the Activity and Microhabitat Selection of Gerbillus Allenbyi and G. Pyramidum

Overview
Journal Oecologia
Date 2017 Mar 18
PMID 28307103
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Predation plays an important role in ecological communities by affecting prey behavior such as foraging and by physical removal of individual prey. In regard to foraging, animals such as desert rodents often balance conflicting demands for food and safety. This has been studied in the field by indirectly manipulating predatory risk through the alteration of cues associated with increased risk such as cover or illumination. It has also been studied by directly manipulating the presence of predators in aviaries. Here, we report on experiments in which we directly manipulated actual predatory risk to desert rodents in the field. We conducted a series of experiments in the field using a trained barn owl (Tyto alba) to investigate how two species of coexisting gerbils (Gerbillus allenbyi and G. pyramidum) respond to various cues of predatory risk in their natural environment. The gerbils responded to risk of predation, in the form of owl flights and owl hunger calls, by reducing their activity in the risky plot relative to the control plot. The strongest response was to owl flights and the weakest to recorded hunger calls of owls. Furthermore, when risk of predation was relatively high, as in the case with barn owl flights, both gerbil species mostly limited their activity to the safer bush microhabitat. The response of the gerbils to risk of predation disappeared very quickly following removal of the treatment, and the gerbils returned to normal levels of activity within the same night. The gerbils did not respond to experimental cues (alarm clock), the presence of the investigators, the presence of a quiet owl, and recorded "white noise". Using trained barn owls, we were able to effectively manipulate actual risk of predation to gerbils in natural habitats and to quantify how gerbils alter their behavior in order to balance conflicting demands of food and safety. The method allows assessment of aspects of behavior, population interactions, and community characteristics involving predation in natural habitats.

Citing Articles

Fire as a driver and mediator of predator-prey interactions.

Doherty T, Geary W, Jolly C, Macdonald K, Miritis V, Watchorn D Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2022; 97(4):1539-1558.

PMID: 35320881 PMC: 9546118. DOI: 10.1111/brv.12853.


Prolonged Bat Call Exposure Induces a Broad Transcriptional Response in the Male Fall Armyworm (; Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) Brain.

Cinel S, Taylor S Front Behav Neurosci. 2019; 13:36.

PMID: 30863292 PMC: 6399161. DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00036.


Divergent behavior amid convergent evolution: A case of four desert rodents learning to respond to known and novel vipers.

Bleicher S, Kotler B, Shalev O, Dixon A, Embar K, Brown J PLoS One. 2018; 13(8):e0200672.

PMID: 30125293 PMC: 6101362. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200672.


Noise pollution has limited effects on nocturnal vigilance in peahens.

Yorzinski J, Hermann F PeerJ. 2016; 4:e2525.

PMID: 27703863 PMC: 5047219. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2525.


Change your diet or die: predator-induced shifts in insectivorous lizard feeding ecology.

Hawlena D, Perez-Mellado V Oecologia. 2009; 161(2):411-9.

PMID: 19466458 DOI: 10.1007/s00442-009-1375-0.


References
1.
Stamp N, Bowers M . Indirect effect on survivorship of caterpillars due to presence of invertebrate predators. Oecologia. 2017; 88(3):325-330. DOI: 10.1007/BF00317574. View

2.
Ohman M, Frost B, Cohen E . Reverse diel vertical migration: an escape from invertebrate predators. Science. 1983; 220(4604):1404-7. DOI: 10.1126/science.220.4604.1404. View

3.
Lima S . Maximizing feeding efficiency and minimizing time exposed to predators: a trade-off in the black-capped chickadee. Oecologia. 2017; 66(1):60-67. DOI: 10.1007/BF00378552. View

4.
Edwards J . Diet shifts in moose due to predator avoidance. Oecologia. 2017; 60(2):185-189. DOI: 10.1007/BF00379520. View

5.
Magnhagen C . Predation risk as a cost of reproduction. Trends Ecol Evol. 2011; 6(6):183-6. DOI: 10.1016/0169-5347(91)90210-O. View