The anatomy of predator–prey dynamics in a changing climate
1. Humans are increasingly influencing global climate and regional predator assemblages,
yet a mechanistic understanding of how climate and predation interact to affect
fluctuations in prey populations is currently lacking.
2. Here we develop a modelling framework to explore the effects of different predation
strategies on the response of age-structured prey populations to a changing climate.
3. We show that predation acts in opposition to temporal correlation in climatic
conditions to suppress prey population fluctuations.
4. Ambush predators such as lions are shown to be more effective at suppressing
fluctuations in their prey than cursorial predators such as wolves, which chase down
prey over long distances, because they are more effective predators on prime-aged adults.
5. We model climate as a Markov process and explore the consequences of future
changes in climatic autocorrelation for population dynamics. We show that the presence
of healthy predator populations will be particularly important in dampening prey
population fluctuations if temporal correlation in climatic conditions increases in the
future.
Publication Date: 2007
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