Abstract

Introduced predators have caused declines and extinctions of native species worldwide, seemingly able to find and hunt new, unfamiliar prey from the time of their introduction. Yet, just as native species are often naïve to introduced predators, in theory, introduced predators should initially be naïve in their response to novel native prey. Here we examine the response of free-living introduced red foxes (Vulpes vulpes) to their first encounter with the odour cues of a novel native prey, the long-nosed bandicoot (Perameles nasuta). Despite no experience with bandicoots at the study site, foxes were significantly more interested in bandicoot odour compared to untreated controls and to a co-evolved prey, the black rat (Rattus rattus). So what gives introduced predators a novelty advantage over native prey? Such neophilia towards novel potential food sources carries little costs, however naïve native prey often lack analogous neophobic responses towards novel predators, possibly because predator avoidance is so costly. We propose that this nexus between the costs and benefits of responding to novel information is different for alien predators and native prey, giving alien predators a novelty advantage over native prey. This may explain why some introduced predators have rapid and devastating impacts on native fauna.

Highlights

  • Introduced predators have caused declines and extinctions of native species worldwide, seemingly able to find and hunt new, unfamiliar prey from the time of their introduction

  • The exaggerated impacts of alien predators are usually attributed to a lack of effective anti-predator strategies by native prey towards these predators[4], which hinges on the assumption that introduced predators enjoy a novelty advantage that facilitates their invasion success[5]

  • There are numerous studies on animals rapidly learning about novel food items in a laboratory environment (e.g.8,9), there is a general lack of understanding of how wild living invasive predators respond to novel prey cues on their initial encounter

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Summary

Introduction

Introduced predators have caused declines and extinctions of native species worldwide, seemingly able to find and hunt new, unfamiliar prey from the time of their introduction. Given that naiveté towards novel species can go both ways, introduced predators should be initially naïve to native prey[5].

Results
Conclusion
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