Data from: Fatal attraction? Intraguild facilitation and suppression among predators

SEMdatawlfclusterdata Competition and suppression are recognized as dominant forces that structure predator communities. Facilitation via carrion provisioning, however, is a ubiquitous interaction among predators that could offset the strength of suppression. Understanding the relative importance of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sivy, Kelly J., Pozzanghera, Casey B., Grace, James B., Prugh, Laura R.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Dryad Digital Repository 2020
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.tj590
Description
Summary:SEMdatawlfclusterdata Competition and suppression are recognized as dominant forces that structure predator communities. Facilitation via carrion provisioning, however, is a ubiquitous interaction among predators that could offset the strength of suppression. Understanding the relative importance of these positive and negative interactions is necessary to anticipate community-wide responses to apex predator declines and recoveries worldwide. Using state-sponsored wolf (Canis lupus) control in Alaska as a quasi-experiment, we conducted snow track surveys of apex, meso-, and small predators to test for evidence of carnivore cascades (e.g., mesopredator release). We analyzed survey data using an integrative occupancy and structural equation modeling framework to quantify the strengths of hypothesized interaction pathways, and we evaluated fine-scale spatiotemporal responses of non-apex predators to wolf activity clusters identified from radio-collar data. Contrary to the carnivore cascade hypothesis, both meso- and small predator occupancy patterns indicated guild-wide, negative responses of non-apex predators to wolf abundance variations at the landscape scale. At the local scale, however, we observed a near guild-wide, positive response of non-apex predators to localized wolf activity. Local-scale association with apex predators due to scavenging could lead to landscape patterns of mesopredator suppression, suggesting a key link between occupancy patterns and the structure of predator communities at different spatial scales.