Context-dependent insect predation pressure on an avian ectoparasite Salido, Ángela Veiga Neto, Jesús Reyes-López, Joaquín Luis Valera, Francisco Ants Arid areas Carnus Hemapterus Consumer-resource interaction Ecosystem productivity Predator–parasite Rainfall Funded by a predoctoral grant (BES-2015-075951) from the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness and by the postdoctoral grant “Margarita-Salas” funded by Spanish Ministry of Universities and the European Union—NextGenerationEU. This paper is part of Project PGC2018-097426-B-C22 funded by MCIN/ AEI /10.13039/501100011033/ and by “ERDF A way of making Europe". Context dependence arises when ecological relationships vary with the condi- tions under which they are observed. Context dependence of interactions involving par- asites is poorly known, even if it is key to understanding host–parasite relationships and food web dynamics. This paper investigates to which extent predation pressure on an avian ectoparasite (Carnus hemapterus) is context-dependent. Based on a predator-exclusion ex- periment, predation pressure on C. hemapterus pupae in the host’s nest for 3 years, and its variation between habitat types are quantified. Variation in precipitation and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is also explored as a likely cause of context depen- dency. We hypothesize that predation pressure should fluctuate with such surrogates of food availability, so that inter-annual and intra-annual differences may emerge. The num- ber of nests with significant reduction of pupae varied widely among years ranging from 24% to 75%. However, average pupae reduction in nests where a significant reduction occurred did not vary between years. No differences in predation rates between habitat types were detected. Precipitation and NDVI varied widely between years and NDVI was consistently lower around nests on cliffs than around nests on trees and farmhouses. Paral- lels were found between variation in predation pressure and precipitation/NDVI at a wide scale (highest predation the driest year, and much lower the 2 rainier ones), but not at the nest scale. This paper shows clear context-dependent insect predation pressure on an ectoparasite under natural conditions, and that such interaction changes in signs rather than magnitude between years. The causes for these variations require longer-term studies and/or well-designed, large-scale experiments. 2023-06-13T10:47:23Z 2023-06-13T10:47:23Z 2023-04 info:eu-repo/semantics/article A. Salido et al. Context-dependent insect predation pressure on an avian ectoparasite. Insect Science (2023) 0, 1–14. [DOI 10.1111/1744-7917.13197] https://hdl.handle.net/10481/82401 10.1111/1744-7917.13197 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Atribución 4.0 Internacional Wiley