4.6 Article

Energy-mediated responses to changing prey size and distribution in marine top predator movements and population dynamics

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
卷 91, 期 1, 页码 241-254

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13627

关键词

agent-based model; climate change effects; energy budgets; harbour porpoise; hidden Markov modelling; marine mammal; physiological ecology; predictive ecology

资金

  1. Danish Centre for Environment and Energy
  2. Vattenfall
  3. Forewind
  4. ENECO Luchterduinen
  5. Orsted
  6. Scottish Power Renewables

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Climate change is altering marine ecosystems and impacting fish communities, which in turn affects predator species. Understanding the effects of changing environmental conditions on population dynamics is crucial for conservation efforts. This study used a detailed agent-based model to investigate how shifting prey size and spatial aggregation can impact the movement, energetics, and population dynamics of harbour porpoises. The results showed that prey size and aggregation level influenced porpoise behavior and population viability, highlighting the importance of considering changes in prey structure in addition to prey abundance.
Climate change is modifying the structure of marine ecosystems, including that of fish communities. Alterations in abiotic and biotic conditions can decrease fish size and change community spatial arrangement, ultimately impacting predator species which rely on these communities. To conserve predators and understand the drivers of observed changes in their population dynamics, we must advance our understanding of how shifting environmental conditions can impact populations by limiting food available to individuals. To investigate the impacts of changing fish size and spatial aggregation on a top predator population, we applied an existing agent-based model parameterized for harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena which represents animal energetics and movements in high detail. We used this framework to quantify the impacts of shifting prey size and spatial aggregation on porpoise movement, space use, energetics and population dynamics. Simulated individuals were more likely to switch from area-restricted search to transit behaviour with increasing prey size, particularly when starving, due to elevated resource competition. In simulations with highly aggregated prey, higher prey encounter rates counteracted resource competition, resulting in no impacts of prey spatial aggregation on movement behaviour. Reduced energy intake with decreasing prey size and aggregation level caused population decline, with a 15% decrease in fish length resulting in total population collapse Increasing prey consumption rates by 42.8 +/- 4.5% could offset population declines; however, this increase was 21.3 +/- 12.7% higher than needed to account for changes in total energy availability alone. This suggests that animals in realistic seascapes require additional energy to locate smaller prey which should be considered when assessing the impacts of decreased energy availability. Changes in prey size and aggregation influenced movements and population dynamics of simulated harbour porpoises, revealing that climate-induced changes in prey structure, not only prey abundance, may threaten predator populations. We demonstrate how a population model with realistic animal movements and process-based energetics can be used to investigate population consequences of shifting food availability, such as those mediated by climate change, and provide a mechanistic explanation for how changes in prey structure can impact energetics, behaviour and ultimately viability of predator populations.

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