Predators play a critical, top-down role in shaping ecosystems, driving prey population and community dynamics. Traditionally, studies of predator-prey interactions have focused on direct effects of predators, namely the killing of prey. More recently, the non-consumptive effects of predation risk are being appreciated; e.g., the Ecology of Fear. Prey responses to predation risk can be morphological, behavioural, and physiological, and are assumed to come at a cost to prey fitness. However, few studies have examined the relationship between predation risk and survival in wild animals. We tested the hypothesis that predation risk itself could reduce survival in wild-caught snowshoe hares. We exposed female snowshoe hares to a simulated preda...
Determining why some animals form groups while others remain solitary is a longstanding goal in beha...
While our understanding of risk effects and their broader consequences is rooted in small-scale, mes...
The assumption that activity and foraging are risky for prey underlies many predator-prey theories a...
Predators play a critical, top-down role in shaping ecosystems, driving prey population and communit...
Snowshoe hare cycles are one of the most prominent phenomena in ecology. Experimental studies point ...
Prey individuals employ several adaptive behaviours to reduce predation risk. We need to learn how t...
I examined the effects of predation risk on the behaviour and population dynamics of snowshoe hares...
The sublethal effects of high predation risk on both prey behavior and physiology may have long-term...
Like most heavily preyed-upon animals, snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) have to balance conflicting...
Snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) populations cycle over 10-year periods, primarily driven by predati...
1. Population cycles have long fascinated ecologists from the time of Charles Elton in the 1920s. Th...
Pedators can indirectly affect prey survival and reproduction by evoking costly anti-predator respon...
The population dynamics of snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) are fundamental to the ecosystem dynami...
Ecologists have only begun to understand the physiological mechanisms underlying individual- and pop...
1. Predators alter prey populations via direct lethality (density-mediated effects), but in many tax...
Determining why some animals form groups while others remain solitary is a longstanding goal in beha...
While our understanding of risk effects and their broader consequences is rooted in small-scale, mes...
The assumption that activity and foraging are risky for prey underlies many predator-prey theories a...
Predators play a critical, top-down role in shaping ecosystems, driving prey population and communit...
Snowshoe hare cycles are one of the most prominent phenomena in ecology. Experimental studies point ...
Prey individuals employ several adaptive behaviours to reduce predation risk. We need to learn how t...
I examined the effects of predation risk on the behaviour and population dynamics of snowshoe hares...
The sublethal effects of high predation risk on both prey behavior and physiology may have long-term...
Like most heavily preyed-upon animals, snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) have to balance conflicting...
Snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) populations cycle over 10-year periods, primarily driven by predati...
1. Population cycles have long fascinated ecologists from the time of Charles Elton in the 1920s. Th...
Pedators can indirectly affect prey survival and reproduction by evoking costly anti-predator respon...
The population dynamics of snowshoe hares (Lepus americanus) are fundamental to the ecosystem dynami...
Ecologists have only begun to understand the physiological mechanisms underlying individual- and pop...
1. Predators alter prey populations via direct lethality (density-mediated effects), but in many tax...
Determining why some animals form groups while others remain solitary is a longstanding goal in beha...
While our understanding of risk effects and their broader consequences is rooted in small-scale, mes...
The assumption that activity and foraging are risky for prey underlies many predator-prey theories a...