A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Behavioural responses of voles to simulated risk of predation by a native and an alien mustelid: an odour manipulation experiment




AuthorsFey K, Banks PB, Ylonen H, Korpimaki E

PublisherCSIRO PUBLISHING

Publication year2010

JournalWildlife Research

Journal name in sourceWILDLIFE RESEARCH

Journal acronymWILDLIFE RES

Number in series4

Volume37

Issue4

First page 273

Last page282

Number of pages10

ISSN1035-3712

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1071/WR08031


Abstract

Implications. Prey naivete has long been considered as the root cause of the devastating impacts of alien predators, whereby native prey simply fail to recognise and respond to the novel predation risk. Our results reveal a more complex form of naivete whereby native prey appeared to recognise alien predators as a threat but their response is ultimately inadequate. Thus, recognition alone is unlikely to afford protection for native prey from alien-predator impacts. Thus, management strategies that, for example, train prey in recognition of novel threats must induce effective responses if they are expected to succeed.




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