Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.

Predator-prey body mass relationships are a vital part of food webs across ecosystems and provide key information for predicting the susceptibility of carnivore populations to extinction. Despite this, there has been limited research on the minimum and maximum prey size of mammalian carnivores. With...

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Main Authors: Marlee A Tucker, Tracey L Rogers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/25162695/pdf/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-de28052dbb684bfa83eba1a85b2cf7f02021-03-03T20:12:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0198e10640210.1371/journal.pone.0106402Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.Marlee A TuckerTracey L RogersPredator-prey body mass relationships are a vital part of food webs across ecosystems and provide key information for predicting the susceptibility of carnivore populations to extinction. Despite this, there has been limited research on the minimum and maximum prey size of mammalian carnivores. Without information on large-scale patterns of prey mass, we limit our understanding of predation pressure, trophic cascades and susceptibility of carnivores to decreasing prey populations. The majority of studies that examine predator-prey body mass relationships focus on either a single or a subset of mammalian species, which limits the strength of our models as well as their broader application. We examine the relationship between predator body mass and the minimum, maximum and range of their prey's body mass across 108 mammalian carnivores, from weasels to baleen whales (Carnivora and Cetacea). We test whether mammals show a positive relationship between prey and predator body mass, as in reptiles and birds, as well as examine how environment (aquatic and terrestrial) and phylogenetic relatedness play a role in this relationship. We found that phylogenetic relatedness is a strong driver of predator-prey mass patterns in carnivorous mammals and accounts for a higher proportion of variance compared with the biological drivers of body mass and environment. We show a positive predator-prey body mass pattern for terrestrial mammals as found in reptiles and birds, but no relationship for aquatic mammals. Our results will benefit our understanding of trophic interactions, the susceptibility of carnivores to population declines and the role of carnivores within ecosystems.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/25162695/pdf/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marlee A Tucker
Tracey L Rogers
spellingShingle Marlee A Tucker
Tracey L Rogers
Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Marlee A Tucker
Tracey L Rogers
author_sort Marlee A Tucker
title Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
title_short Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
title_full Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
title_fullStr Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
title_full_unstemmed Examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
title_sort examining the prey mass of terrestrial and aquatic carnivorous mammals: minimum, maximum and range.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Predator-prey body mass relationships are a vital part of food webs across ecosystems and provide key information for predicting the susceptibility of carnivore populations to extinction. Despite this, there has been limited research on the minimum and maximum prey size of mammalian carnivores. Without information on large-scale patterns of prey mass, we limit our understanding of predation pressure, trophic cascades and susceptibility of carnivores to decreasing prey populations. The majority of studies that examine predator-prey body mass relationships focus on either a single or a subset of mammalian species, which limits the strength of our models as well as their broader application. We examine the relationship between predator body mass and the minimum, maximum and range of their prey's body mass across 108 mammalian carnivores, from weasels to baleen whales (Carnivora and Cetacea). We test whether mammals show a positive relationship between prey and predator body mass, as in reptiles and birds, as well as examine how environment (aquatic and terrestrial) and phylogenetic relatedness play a role in this relationship. We found that phylogenetic relatedness is a strong driver of predator-prey mass patterns in carnivorous mammals and accounts for a higher proportion of variance compared with the biological drivers of body mass and environment. We show a positive predator-prey body mass pattern for terrestrial mammals as found in reptiles and birds, but no relationship for aquatic mammals. Our results will benefit our understanding of trophic interactions, the susceptibility of carnivores to population declines and the role of carnivores within ecosystems.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/25162695/pdf/?tool=EBI
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