Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos

Classic studies in fear ecology have been inconclusive regarding whether predator waste products repel herbivores and whether the deterrent effect, if any, is based on repulsion or fear. Other studies imply that the predator must have co-evolved with prey to maximize the efficacy of response. We use...

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Main Authors: Parsons, Michael, Lamont, Byron, Kovacs, B., Davies, Stephen
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wildlife Society 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47654
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author Parsons, Michael
Lamont, Byron
Kovacs, B.
Davies, Stephen
author_facet Parsons, Michael
Lamont, Byron
Kovacs, B.
Davies, Stephen
author_sort Parsons, Michael
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Classic studies in fear ecology have been inconclusive regarding whether predator waste products repel herbivores and whether the deterrent effect, if any, is based on repulsion or fear. Other studies imply that the predator must have co-evolved with prey to maximize the efficacy of response. We used chemosensory cues from the urine of native and nonnative canines to manipulate the behavior of the western grey kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus). One-choice feeding trials were located along a distance gradient, and administered to 28 free-ranging, semi-wild, western grey kangaroos. Foods closer to the chemical source (within 12 m) were less likely to be eaten than those further from the source when the urine came from a native predator, the dingo (Canis dingo). Flight behavior was more likely to be observed on occasions when the dingo urine had been presented. A lesser effect occurred (to within 6 m) when urine was presented from the nonnative canid (coyote [Canis latrans]), while the flight behavior occurred once. Neither human urine, nor tap-water control, had any effect. We offer the first evidence that native predator-based chemical cues affect patch selection, while increasing fear, for this herbivore.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-476542017-09-13T16:00:28Z Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos Parsons, Michael Lamont, Byron Kovacs, B. Davies, Stephen deterrents Macropus fuliginosus predator prey sensory modality kairomones kangaroos dingo vigilance flight behavior olfactory Classic studies in fear ecology have been inconclusive regarding whether predator waste products repel herbivores and whether the deterrent effect, if any, is based on repulsion or fear. Other studies imply that the predator must have co-evolved with prey to maximize the efficacy of response. We used chemosensory cues from the urine of native and nonnative canines to manipulate the behavior of the western grey kangaroo (Macropus fuliginosus). One-choice feeding trials were located along a distance gradient, and administered to 28 free-ranging, semi-wild, western grey kangaroos. Foods closer to the chemical source (within 12 m) were less likely to be eaten than those further from the source when the urine came from a native predator, the dingo (Canis dingo). Flight behavior was more likely to be observed on occasions when the dingo urine had been presented. A lesser effect occurred (to within 6 m) when urine was presented from the nonnative canid (coyote [Canis latrans]), while the flight behavior occurred once. Neither human urine, nor tap-water control, had any effect. We offer the first evidence that native predator-based chemical cues affect patch selection, while increasing fear, for this herbivore. 2007 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47654 10.2193/2006-096 Wildlife Society restricted
spellingShingle deterrents
Macropus fuliginosus
predator prey
sensory modality
kairomones
kangaroos
dingo
vigilance
flight behavior
olfactory
Parsons, Michael
Lamont, Byron
Kovacs, B.
Davies, Stephen
Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
title Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
title_full Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
title_fullStr Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
title_full_unstemmed Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
title_short Effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
title_sort effects of novel and historic predator urines on semi-wild western grey kangaroos
topic deterrents
Macropus fuliginosus
predator prey
sensory modality
kairomones
kangaroos
dingo
vigilance
flight behavior
olfactory
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/47654