Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes

In ecologically pristine ecosystems, top-down effects of apex predators play a fundamental role in shaping trophic cascades and structuring ecosystems, but in human-modified landscapes anthropogenic effects may markedly alter the ecological role of predators. In particular, human-provisioned food su...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paolo Ciucci, Sara Mancinelli, Luigi Boitani, Orlando Gallo, Lorenza Grottoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-03-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989419305840
id doaj-ac4c0766d95748a5b90d5c397430ad9b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ac4c0766d95748a5b90d5c397430ad9b2020-11-25T02:19:35ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942020-03-0121Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapesPaolo Ciucci0Sara Mancinelli1Luigi Boitani2Orlando Gallo3Lorenza Grottoli4Corresponding author.; Department of Biology and Biotechnologies, Sapienza University of Rome, Viale Dell’Università 32, 00185, Roma, ItalyDepartment of Biology and Biotechnologies, Sapienza University of Rome, Viale Dell’Università 32, 00185, Roma, ItalyDepartment of Biology and Biotechnologies, Sapienza University of Rome, Viale Dell’Università 32, 00185, Roma, ItalyDepartment of Biology and Biotechnologies, Sapienza University of Rome, Viale Dell’Università 32, 00185, Roma, ItalyDepartment of Biology and Biotechnologies, Sapienza University of Rome, Viale Dell’Università 32, 00185, Roma, ItalyIn ecologically pristine ecosystems, top-down effects of apex predators play a fundamental role in shaping trophic cascades and structuring ecosystems, but in human-modified landscapes anthropogenic effects may markedly alter the ecological role of predators. In particular, human-provisioned food subsidies represent a serious concern for the conservation of apex predators, even though little empirical attention has been given to this aspect in assessing conservation outcomes. To assess the extent to which anthropogenic food subsidies affected feeding ecology of a protected wolf (Canis lupus) population in a human-modified landscape, we integrated scat-analysis (n = 1141 from 4 packs; Jan 2005–Mar 2009) and winter field inspections of Global Positioning System telemetry re-locations (n = 595 clusters and 96 single locations from 5 wolves in 5 packs and 3 floaters; 2008–2011) of wolves living in a historical national park of central Italy hosting both wild prey and livestock at high densities. We revealed that livestock dominated the wolf diet (mean biomass = 63.3 ± 14.2% SD), secondarily supplemented by wild prey (36.7 ± 5.3%, mostly wild boar [Sus scrofa], roe deer [Capreolus capreolus], and red deer [Cervus elaphus]). During winter, we revealed a higher propensity of wolves to scavenge (72.5%; n = 91 feeding events) rather than killing prey, and feeding behavior was affected by prey type (i.e., domestic vs wild ungulates) as the large majority of scavenged carrions (75.8%) were livestock carcasses abandoned on the ground that died for causes different from predation. Feeding behavior of wolves was not affected by social affiliation (i.e., pack members vs solitary wolves), indicating that pack members, even if aided by cooperative hunting, were equally likely than solitary wolves to scavenge rather than killing prey; yet, 27.5% of winter feeding events involved predation, exclusively targeted to wild prey. Our findings indicate that large livestock carrion subsidies may strongly depress predatory behavior in wolves, despite the occurrence of an abundant wild prey community, and have relevant ecological, evolutionary and management implications. Reliance on human-provided livestock carrion subsidies likely alters the ecological role of wolves by reducing their top-down cascading effects on the ecosystem, and this has relevant implications for the conservation of wolves and other apex predators in national parks. Accordingly, we call for more strict regulations to govern livestock management and practices and argue that, at least in national parks, conservation goals of apex predators need to explicitly consider their ecological role. Keywords: Canis lupus, GPS cluster checks, Livestock depredation, Scat analysis, Scavenging, Trophic cascadeshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989419305840
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paolo Ciucci
Sara Mancinelli
Luigi Boitani
Orlando Gallo
Lorenza Grottoli
spellingShingle Paolo Ciucci
Sara Mancinelli
Luigi Boitani
Orlando Gallo
Lorenza Grottoli
Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
Global Ecology and Conservation
author_facet Paolo Ciucci
Sara Mancinelli
Luigi Boitani
Orlando Gallo
Lorenza Grottoli
author_sort Paolo Ciucci
title Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
title_short Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
title_full Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
title_fullStr Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: Insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
title_sort anthropogenic food subsidies hinder the ecological role of wolves: insights for conservation of apex predators in human-modified landscapes
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2020-03-01
description In ecologically pristine ecosystems, top-down effects of apex predators play a fundamental role in shaping trophic cascades and structuring ecosystems, but in human-modified landscapes anthropogenic effects may markedly alter the ecological role of predators. In particular, human-provisioned food subsidies represent a serious concern for the conservation of apex predators, even though little empirical attention has been given to this aspect in assessing conservation outcomes. To assess the extent to which anthropogenic food subsidies affected feeding ecology of a protected wolf (Canis lupus) population in a human-modified landscape, we integrated scat-analysis (n = 1141 from 4 packs; Jan 2005–Mar 2009) and winter field inspections of Global Positioning System telemetry re-locations (n = 595 clusters and 96 single locations from 5 wolves in 5 packs and 3 floaters; 2008–2011) of wolves living in a historical national park of central Italy hosting both wild prey and livestock at high densities. We revealed that livestock dominated the wolf diet (mean biomass = 63.3 ± 14.2% SD), secondarily supplemented by wild prey (36.7 ± 5.3%, mostly wild boar [Sus scrofa], roe deer [Capreolus capreolus], and red deer [Cervus elaphus]). During winter, we revealed a higher propensity of wolves to scavenge (72.5%; n = 91 feeding events) rather than killing prey, and feeding behavior was affected by prey type (i.e., domestic vs wild ungulates) as the large majority of scavenged carrions (75.8%) were livestock carcasses abandoned on the ground that died for causes different from predation. Feeding behavior of wolves was not affected by social affiliation (i.e., pack members vs solitary wolves), indicating that pack members, even if aided by cooperative hunting, were equally likely than solitary wolves to scavenge rather than killing prey; yet, 27.5% of winter feeding events involved predation, exclusively targeted to wild prey. Our findings indicate that large livestock carrion subsidies may strongly depress predatory behavior in wolves, despite the occurrence of an abundant wild prey community, and have relevant ecological, evolutionary and management implications. Reliance on human-provided livestock carrion subsidies likely alters the ecological role of wolves by reducing their top-down cascading effects on the ecosystem, and this has relevant implications for the conservation of wolves and other apex predators in national parks. Accordingly, we call for more strict regulations to govern livestock management and practices and argue that, at least in national parks, conservation goals of apex predators need to explicitly consider their ecological role. Keywords: Canis lupus, GPS cluster checks, Livestock depredation, Scat analysis, Scavenging, Trophic cascades
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989419305840
work_keys_str_mv AT paolociucci anthropogenicfoodsubsidieshindertheecologicalroleofwolvesinsightsforconservationofapexpredatorsinhumanmodifiedlandscapes
AT saramancinelli anthropogenicfoodsubsidieshindertheecologicalroleofwolvesinsightsforconservationofapexpredatorsinhumanmodifiedlandscapes
AT luigiboitani anthropogenicfoodsubsidieshindertheecologicalroleofwolvesinsightsforconservationofapexpredatorsinhumanmodifiedlandscapes
AT orlandogallo anthropogenicfoodsubsidieshindertheecologicalroleofwolvesinsightsforconservationofapexpredatorsinhumanmodifiedlandscapes
AT lorenzagrottoli anthropogenicfoodsubsidieshindertheecologicalroleofwolvesinsightsforconservationofapexpredatorsinhumanmodifiedlandscapes
_version_ 1724875738748813312