• Title of article

    Predator cue studies reveal strong trait-mediated effects in communities despite variation in experimental designs

  • Author/Authors

    Rachel A. Paterson، نويسنده , , Daniel W. Pritchard، نويسنده , , Jaimie T.A. Dick، نويسنده , , Mhairi E. Alexander، نويسنده , , MELANIE J. HATCHER، نويسنده , , ALISON M. DUNN، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    13
  • From page
    1301
  • To page
    1313
  • Abstract
    Nonconsumptive or trait-mediated effects of predators on their prey often outweigh density-mediated interactions where predators consume prey. For instance, predator presence can alter prey behaviour, physiology, morphology and/or development. Despite a burgeoning literature, our ability to identify general patterns in prey behavioural responses may be influenced by the inconsistent methodologies of predator cue experiments used to assess trait-mediated effects. We therefore conducted a meta-analysis to highlight variables (e.g. water type, predator husbandry, exposure time) that may influence invertebrate preyʹs behavioural responses to fish predator cues. This revealed that changes in prey activity and refuge use were remarkably consistent overall, despite wide differences in experimental methodologies. Our meta-analysis shows that invertebrates altered their behaviour to predator cues of both fish that were fed the focal invertebrate and those that were fed other prey types, which suggests that invertebrates were not responding to specific diet information in the fish cues. Invertebrates also altered their behaviour regardless of predator cue addition regimes and fish satiation levels. Cue intensity and exposure time did not have significant effects on invertebrate behaviour. We also highlight that potentially confounding factors, such as parasitism, were rarely recorded in sufficient detail to assess the magnitude of their effects. By examining the likelihood of detecting trait-mediated effects under large variations in experimental design, our study demonstrates that trait-mediated effects are likely to have pervasive and powerful influences in nature.
  • Keywords
    nonconsumptive effect , predator cue , predator avoidance , trait-mediated effect , indirect effect
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Record number

    1284729