Human habitat modification, not apex scavenger decline, drives isotopic niche variation in a carnivore community

Bell, O., Jones, M. E., Ruiz‑Aravena, M., Hamilton, D. G., Comte, S., Hamer, R., Hamede, R. K., Newton, J. , Bearhop, S. and McDonald, R. A. (2024) Human habitat modification, not apex scavenger decline, drives isotopic niche variation in a carnivore community. Oecologia, (doi: 10.1007/s00442-024-05544-9) (Early Online Publication)

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Abstract

Top carnivores can influence the structure of ecological communities, primarily through competition and predation; however, communities are also influenced by bottom-up forces such as anthropogenic habitat disturbance. Top carnivore declines will likely alter competitive dynamics within and amongst sympatric carnivore species. Increasing intraspecific competition is generally predicted to drive niche expansion and/or individual specialisation, while interspecific competition tends to constrain niches. Using stable isotope analysis of whiskers, we studied the effects of Tasmanian devil Sarcophilus harrisii declines upon the population- and individual-level isotopic niches of Tasmanian devils and sympatric spotted-tailed quolls Dasyurus maculatus subsp. maculatus. We investigated whether time since the onset of devil decline (a proxy for severity of decline) and landscape characteristics affected the isotopic niche breadth and overlap of devil and quoll populations. We quantified individual isotopic niche breadth for a subset of Tasmanian devils and spotted-tailed quolls and assessed whether between-site population niche variation was driven by individual-level specialisation. Tasmanian devils and spotted-tailed quolls demonstrated smaller population-level isotopic niche breadths with increasing human-modified habitat, while time since the onset of devil decline had no effect on population-level niche breadth or interspecific niche overlap. Individual isotopic niche breadths of Tasmanian devils and spotted-tailed quolls were narrower in human-modified landscapes, likely driving population isotopic niche contraction, however, the degree of individuals’ specialisation relative to one another remained constant. Our results suggest that across varied landscapes, mammalian carnivore niches can be more sensitive to the bottom-up forces of anthropogenic habitat disturbance than to the top-down effects of top carnivore decline.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Early Online Publication
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Newton, Dr Jason
Authors: Bell, O., Jones, M. E., Ruiz‑Aravena, M., Hamilton, D. G., Comte, S., Hamer, R., Hamede, R. K., Newton, J., Bearhop, S., and McDonald, R. A.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre
Journal Name:Oecologia
Publisher:Springer
ISSN:0029-8549
ISSN (Online):1432-1939
Published Online:15 April 2024
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2024 The Authors
First Published:First published in Oecologia 2024
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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