Too much is bad: increasing numbers of livestock and conspecifics reduce body mass in an avian scavenger

Citation

Donázar, J. A., J. M. Barbosa, M. García-Alfonso, T. van Overveld, L. Gangoso, and M. de la Riva. 2020. Too much is bad: increasing numbers of livestock and conspecifics reduce body mass in an avian scavenger. Ecological Applications 30(6):e02125. 10.1002/eap.2125

Abstract

Individual traits such as body mass can serve as early warning signals of changes in the fitness prospects of animal populations facing environmental impacts. Here, taking advantage of a 19-yr monitoring, we assessed how individual, population, and environmental factors modulate long-term changes in the body mass of Canarian Egyptian vultures. Individual vulture body mass increased when primary productivity was highly variable, but decreased in years with a high abundance of livestock. We hypothesized that carcasses of wild animals, a natural food resource that can be essential for avian scavengers, could be more abundant in periods of weather instability but depleted when high livestock numbers lead to overgrazing. In addition, increasing vulture population numbers also negatively affect body mass suggesting density-dependent competition for food. Interestingly, the relative strength of individual, population and resource availability factors on body mass changed with age and territorial status, a pattern presumably shaped by differences in competitive abilities and/or age-dependent environmental knowledge and foraging skills. Our study supports that individual plastic traits may be extremely reliable tools to better understand the response of secondary consumers to current and future natural and human-induced environmental changes.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Description

The study was funded by the Cabildo Insular de Fuerteventura, Viceconsejería de Medio Ambiente del Gobierno de Canarias, the Research Projects REN 2000- 1556 GLO, CGL2004-00270, CGL2012-40013-C02-01, CGL2015-66966-C2-1-2-R and RTI2018-099609-B-C21 (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness and EU/FEDER), and the Severo Ochoa Excellence Award from the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (SEV-2012-0262). M.García-Alfonso was supported by a contract from "Programa de FPU del Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte" (FPU13/05429). T. V. Overveld received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement ”SocForVul 659008.” During the writing of this manuscript, a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellowship from the European Commission (grant number 747729, EcoEvoClim) supported L. Gangoso and J. M. Barbosa was supported by the Juan de la Cierva fellowship.

Keywords

Collections