Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/24554

Title: Why do top predators engage in superpredation? FRom an empirical scenario to a theoretical framework
Authors: Lourenço, Rui
Delgado, Maria del Mar
Campioni, Letizia
Goytre, Fernando
Rabaça, João E.
Korpimaki, Erki
Penteriani, Vincenzo
Keywords: Competitive kiling
decision-making
food stress
injury risk
intraguild predation
mesopredators
optimal diet
superpredation
top predators
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: OIKOS
Citation: Lourenço, R., Delgado, M. del M., Campioni, L., Goytre, F., Rabaça, J.E., Korpimäki, E. & Penteriani, V. 2018. Why do top predators engage in superpredation? From na empirical scenario to a theoretical framework. Oikos, 127: 1563-1574.
Abstract: Lethal interactions can shape ecosystem structure, and consequently understanding their causes is ecologically relevant. To improve both empirical and theoretical knowledge on superpredation (i.e. predation on high-order predators), we studied an eagle owl population, including its main prey and mesopredators, and then we crossed these results with existing theories to provide a reasoning framework. We ftted our feld data into four main causes explaining lethal interactions: food stress, opportunistic superpredation, removal of a competitor, and removal of a potential threat. Empirically, superpredation seemed to be mostly determined by the combination of the food-stress and opportunistic-superpredation hypotheses, which highlights the complexity of the factors triggering superpredation. Therefore, besides being a response to lower food availability, superpredation may also represent an effective mechanism to remove potential predators and/or competitors, either intentionally or not. Our theoretical framework focused on the decision-making process in superpredation, considering four inter-related stages: encountering; attacking; and capturing a mesopredator; as well as consuming a mesopredator once killed. Superpredation almost certainly results from a complex process of decision-making, accounting for costs and benefts assessed moment-to-moment and for each mesopredator individual. It is time to build bridges between theoretical and empirical studies to further understand the mechanisms driving complex interactions among top predators and mesopredators.
URI: doi: 10.1111/oik.05118
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/24554
Type: article
Appears in Collections:MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
BIO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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