Top-predator carrion is scary: Fight-and-flight responses of wild boars to wolf carcasses
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Antipredator responses Canis lupus Landscape of fear Predation risk Predator avoidance Prey behavior
Date
2023-04Referencia bibliográfica
Redondo-Gómez et al. Top-predator carrion is scary: Fight-and-flight responses of wild boars to wolf carcasses. Ecology and Evolution. 2023;13:e9911. [https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9911]
Sponsorship
Junta de Andalucia PREDOC_00262; Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain (MICINN) Instituto de Salud Carlos III Spanish Government PID2021-128952NB-I00; RYC-2015-19231Abstract
Predation risk largely constrains prey behavior. However, whether predators may be
scary also after death remains unexplored. Here, we describe the “fight-and-flight”
responses of a prey, the wild boar (Sus scrofa), to carcasses of (a) its main predator,
the gray wolf (Canis lupus) and (b) a carnivore that very rarely kills wild boars, the
red fox (Vulpes vulpes), in the western Alps (Italy). We recorded the behavior of wild
boars at 10 wolf and 9 fox carcass sites. We found eight “fight-and-flight” responses
toward wolf carcasses, and none toward fox carcasses. Our results suggest that car-
nivore carcasses may indeed be scary; fear responses toward them are dependent on
the species to which the carcass belongs; and animals approaching the carcasses are
feared mainly when the latter are relatively fresh. This emphasizes the multiple and
complex roles that carrion plays in the landscape of fear and opens exciting ecological,
epidemiological, and evolutionary research avenues.