| The Open Ecology
Journal
ISSN: 1874-2130 |
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[DOI: 10.2174/1874213001003030022]
Predator Effects in Predator-Free Space: the Remote Effects
of Predators on Prey
John L. Orrock, Lawrence M. Dill, Andrew Sih, Jonathan H. Grabowski,
Scott D. Peacor, Barbara L. Peckarsky, Evan L. Preisser, James R.
Vonesh and Earl E. Werner Pp 22-30
Predators can have remote effects on prey populations that are connected
by migration (i.e. prey metapopulations) because predator-mediated
changes in prey behavior and abundance effectively transmit the
impact of predators into predator-free prey populations. Behavioral
changes in prey that might give rise to remote effects are altered
rates of migration or activity in the presence of predation risk
(called non-consumptive effects, fear- or μ-driven
effects, and risk effects). Changes in prey abundance that may result
in remote effects arise from changes in prey density due to direct
predation (i.e. consumptive effects, also called N-driven effects
and predation effects). Remote effects provide a different perspective
on both predator-prey interactions and spatial subsidies, illustrating
how the interplay among space, time, behavior, and consumption generates
emergent spatial dynamics in places where we might not expect them.
We describe how strong remote effects of predators may essentially
generate “remote control” over the dynamics of local
populations, alter the persistence of metapopulations, shift the
importance of particular paradigms of metacommunity structure, alter
spatial subsidies, and affect evolutionary dynamics. We suggest
how experiments might document remote effects and predict that remote
effects will be an important component of prey dynamics under several
common scenarios: when predators induce large changes in prey dispersal
behavior, when predators dramatically reduce the number of prey
available to disperse, when prey movement dynamics occur over greater
distances or shorter timescales than predator movement, and when
prey abundance is not already limited by competitors or conspecifics.

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