Abstract

The relationship between intake rate and food density can provide the foundation for models that predict the spatiotemporal distribution of organisms across a range of resource densities. The functional response, describing the relationship between resource density and intake rate is often interpreted mechanistically as the relationships between times spend searching and handling. While several functional response models incorporate anti-predator vigilance (defined here as an interruption of feeding or some other activity to visually scan the environment, directed mainly towards detecting potential predators), the impacts of environmental factors influencing directly anti-predator vigilance remains unclear. We examined the combined effects of different scenarios of predation risk and food density on time allocation between foraging and anti-predator vigilance in a granivorous species. We experimentally exposed Skylarks to various cover heights and seed densities, and measured individual time budget and pecking and intake rates. Our results indicated that time devoted to different activities varied as a function of both seed density and cover height. Foraging time increased with seed density for all cover heights. Conversely, an increased cover height resulted in a decreased foraging time. Contrary to males, the decreased proportion of time spent foraging did not translate into a foraging disadvantage for females. When vegetation height was higher, females maintained similar pecking and intake rates compared to intermediate levels, while males consistently decreased their energy gain. This difference in anti-predator responses suggests a sexually mediated strategy in the food-safety trade-off: when resource density is high a females would adopt a camouflage strategy while an escape strategy would be adopted by males. In other words, males would leave risky-areas, whereas females would stay when resource density is high. Our results suggest that increased predation risk might generate sexually mediated behavioural responses that functional response models should perhaps better consider in the future.

Highlights

  • The relationship between intake rate and food density can provide the foundation for models that predict the spatiotemporal distribution of organisms across a range of resource densities [1]

  • Impacts of the vegetation height In this study, we experimentally examined how resource availability and perceived predation risk affected time budget, pecking rate and seed intake in skylarks

  • Our results indicated that time devoted to foraging varied both as a function of seed density and vegetation height

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Summary

Introduction

The relationship between intake rate and food density can provide the foundation for models that predict the spatiotemporal distribution of organisms across a range of resource densities [1]. Though much work has been devoted to investigating individuals’ responses to varying resource densities and predation risk independently [5,6], only a few studies have experimentally considered the combined effects of these factors on foraging time-budget and energy gain [7,8]. This could be important because food availability should impact patch selection by influencing intake rate, predator detection, and avoidance [9]. Depending on species and their anti-predator strategies, patches with complex vegetation structure may be assimilated as dangerous by increase the perceived risk of predation [6,16,24] or protective by limiting the prey detectability by predators [25,26,27]

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