Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis

Prey naiveté is a failure to recognise novel predators and thought to cause exaggerated impacts of alien predators on native wildlife. Yet there is equivocal evidence in the literature for native prey naiveté towards aliens. To address this, we conducted a meta-analysis of Australian mammal response...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Peter B. Banks, Alexandra J. R. Carthey, Jenna P. Bytheway
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.d317663
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_from_Australian_native_mammals_recognise_and_respond_to_alien_predators_a_meta-analysis/20044826
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftmacquariefig:oai:figshare.com:article/20044826 2023-05-15T15:50:38+02:00 Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis Peter B. Banks Alexandra J. R. Carthey Jenna P. Bytheway 2018-08-02T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.d317663 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_from_Australian_native_mammals_recognise_and_respond_to_alien_predators_a_meta-analysis/20044826 unknown doi:10.5061/dryad.d317663 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_from_Australian_native_mammals_recognise_and_respond_to_alien_predators_a_meta-analysis/20044826 CC0 CC0 Other education not elsewhere classified alien species Feral cat red fox prey naïveté predator recognition Dataset 2018 ftmacquariefig https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.d317663 2022-12-28T08:33:56Z Prey naiveté is a failure to recognise novel predators and thought to cause exaggerated impacts of alien predators on native wildlife. Yet there is equivocal evidence in the literature for native prey naiveté towards aliens. To address this, we conducted a meta-analysis of Australian mammal responses to native and alien predators. Australia has the world’s worst record of extinction and declines of native mammals, largely due to two alien predators introduced some 150 years ago: the feral cat, Felis catus, and European red fox, Vulpes vulpes. Analysis of 94 responses to predator cues show that Australian mammals consistently recognise alien foxes as a predation threat, possibly because of thousands of years experience with another canid predator, the dingo, Canis lupus dingo. We also found consistent recogntion responses towards feral cats, however in 4 of the 7 studies available, these responses were of risk-taking behaviour rather than antipredator behaviour. Our results suggest that a simple failure to recognise alien predators is not behind the ongoing exaggerated impacts of alien predators in Australia. Instead, our results highlight an urgent need to better understand the appropriateness of antipredator responses in prey towards alien predators in order to understand native prey vulnerability. Usage Notes Australian mammal naiveté meta-analysis dataAustralian mammal naiveté meta-analysis dataMeta Analysis Data for Dryad.xlsb Dataset Canis lupus Research from Macquarie University
institution Open Polar
collection Research from Macquarie University
op_collection_id ftmacquariefig
language unknown
topic Other education not elsewhere classified
alien species
Feral cat
red fox
prey naïveté
predator recognition
spellingShingle Other education not elsewhere classified
alien species
Feral cat
red fox
prey naïveté
predator recognition
Peter B. Banks
Alexandra J. R. Carthey
Jenna P. Bytheway
Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
topic_facet Other education not elsewhere classified
alien species
Feral cat
red fox
prey naïveté
predator recognition
description Prey naiveté is a failure to recognise novel predators and thought to cause exaggerated impacts of alien predators on native wildlife. Yet there is equivocal evidence in the literature for native prey naiveté towards aliens. To address this, we conducted a meta-analysis of Australian mammal responses to native and alien predators. Australia has the world’s worst record of extinction and declines of native mammals, largely due to two alien predators introduced some 150 years ago: the feral cat, Felis catus, and European red fox, Vulpes vulpes. Analysis of 94 responses to predator cues show that Australian mammals consistently recognise alien foxes as a predation threat, possibly because of thousands of years experience with another canid predator, the dingo, Canis lupus dingo. We also found consistent recogntion responses towards feral cats, however in 4 of the 7 studies available, these responses were of risk-taking behaviour rather than antipredator behaviour. Our results suggest that a simple failure to recognise alien predators is not behind the ongoing exaggerated impacts of alien predators in Australia. Instead, our results highlight an urgent need to better understand the appropriateness of antipredator responses in prey towards alien predators in order to understand native prey vulnerability. Usage Notes Australian mammal naiveté meta-analysis dataAustralian mammal naiveté meta-analysis dataMeta Analysis Data for Dryad.xlsb
format Dataset
author Peter B. Banks
Alexandra J. R. Carthey
Jenna P. Bytheway
author_facet Peter B. Banks
Alexandra J. R. Carthey
Jenna P. Bytheway
author_sort Peter B. Banks
title Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
title_short Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
title_full Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
title_fullStr Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
title_sort data from: australian native mammals recognise and respond to alien predators: a meta-analysis
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.d317663
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_from_Australian_native_mammals_recognise_and_respond_to_alien_predators_a_meta-analysis/20044826
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation doi:10.5061/dryad.d317663
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_from_Australian_native_mammals_recognise_and_respond_to_alien_predators_a_meta-analysis/20044826
op_rights CC0
op_rightsnorm CC0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.d317663
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