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Climate effects on prey vulnerability modify expectations of predator responses to short- and long-term climate fluctuations
Morin, Aissa; Chamaillé-Jammes, Simon; Valeix, Marion
Climate changes affect the distribution and abundance of organisms, often via changes
in species interactions. Most animals experience predation, and a number of models
have investigated how climate fluctuations can influence predator–prey dynamics by
affecting prey abundance through changes in resource availability. However, field studies
have shown that prey vulnerability is a key feature determining the outcome of predator–
prey interactions, which also varies with climatic conditions, via changes in prey body
condition or in habitat characteristics (e.g. vegetation cover). In this theoretical work, we
explore, with large mammals of African savannas in mind, how the interplay between
climate-induced changes in prey abundance and climate-induced changes in prey
vulnerability affects the immediate and long-term responses of predator populations. We
account for prey body condition and habitat effects on prey vulnerability to predation.
We show that predictions on how predator abundance responds to climate fluctuations
differ depending on how climate influences prey vulnerability (habitat characteristics vs.
prey body condition). We discuss how species traits influence the relative importance of
the different sources of vulnerability. For example, our results suggest that populations
of cursorial predators (such as spotted hyaenas) are expected to fare better than
populations of ambush predators (such as African lions) in African ecosystems that
will be characterised by an aridification. This study highlights the importance of
understanding, and accounting for, the vulnerability factors associated to a given
predator–prey pair, and improves our comprehension of predator–prey relationships in a
changing climate.
Description:
We thank C. Wilmers for providing the code of the published
model that serves as the basis of ours. In addition, this work
benefited from the computing cluster platform of the Centre
d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive and from Biosphere, the
IFB cloud for life sciences. We thank Bruno Spataro and
Stéphane Delmotte from the LBBE computing services for
their help in using computing facilities. Finally, we thank two
reviewers for their fruitful comments on a previous draft of
this manuscript.