确定最有效的行为分析和捕食者线索,以量化哺乳动物的反捕食者反应:一个系统的审查方案

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Natasha D Harrison, Rochelle Steven, Ben L Phillips, Jan M Hemmi, Adrian F Wayne, Nicola J Mitchell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:全球哺乳动物正面临种群数量下降的问题。在没有捕食者的庇护所中保护和繁育受威胁的种群,并将它们迁回野外,通常被视为一种解决方案。这些方法可能会使捕食者不熟悉的动物暴露在它们从未遇到过的捕食者面前,因此,许多保护项目因缺乏适当的抗捕食者反应而失败。因此,亟需强有力的方法来测量抗捕食者反应,以帮助识别面临风险的幼稚种群,选择合适的动物进行迁移,并监测受管理种群抗捕食者特征的变化。在此,我们对现有的抗捕食者反应行为测定方法进行了系统回顾,并确定了引起最大行为反应的测定类型和捕食者线索:我们使用布尔搜索字符串从学术文献数据库和灰色文献来源(如政府和保护管理报告)中检索文章。根据 PICO(人口-干预-比较者-结果)框架确定的资格标准对每篇文章进行筛选。利用从每篇文章中提取的数据,我们绘制了用于量化哺乳动物抗捕食者反应的所有已知行为测定方法,并研究了每种测定方法的实施背景(如测试物种、捕食者线索特征)。最后,通过混合效应模型,我们根据处理组和对照组之间的标准化反应差异,确定了这些试验和捕食者线索类型中哪些能引起最大的行为反应:我们审查了 5168 篇文章,其中 211 篇符合条件,包括 1016 项研究,涉及 126 种哺乳动物,其中四分之一受到入侵物种的威胁。我们确定了六种主要的行为测定类型:行为聚焦、捕获概率、觅食站、飞行起始距离、放弃密度和刺激呈现。在所有研究中,我们主要测量了五种行为:活动、逃跑、探索、觅食和警惕。这些行为在不同研究中产生的效应大小相似。但在研究设计方面,使用天然嗅觉线索的研究往往比使用人工线索的研究报告的效应大小更大。对性别进行单独分析的研究,其效应大小要大于对雌雄进行综合分析的研究。使用 "空白 "对照处理(无刺激)而非对照刺激处理的研究,其效应量更大。尽管许多研究涉及对已知个体的重复测量,但其中只有 15.4% 的研究使用其数据来计算个体重复性的测量值:我们的综述强调了实验设计和报告中应考虑的重要方面。在可能的情况下,对反捕食者行为的研究应使用适当的对照处理,分别分析雄性和雌性,并选择有机的捕食者线索。研究还应该报告行为特征的个体重复性,并正确识别不确定性(误差条)。本综述强调了稳健的方法论,揭示了有希望成为未来检测开发重点的技术,并为保护管理人员整理了相关信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Identifying the most effective behavioural assays and predator cues for quantifying anti-predator responses in mammals: a systematic review.

Background: Mammals, globally, are facing population declines. Protecting and breeding threatened populations inside predator-free havens and translocating them back to the wild is commonly viewed as a solution. These approaches can expose predator-naïve animals to predators they have never encountered and as a result, many conservation projects have failed due to the predation of individuals that lacked appropriate anti-predator responses. Hence, robust ways to measure anti-predator responses are urgently needed to help identify naïve populations at risk, to select appropriate animals for translocation, and to monitor managed populations for changes in anti-predator traits. Here, we undertake a systematic review that collates existing behavioural assays of anti-predator responses and identifies assay types and predator cues that provoke the greatest behavioural responses.

Methods: We retrieved articles from academic bibliographic databases and grey literature sources (such as government and conservation management reports), using a Boolean search string. Each article was screened against eligibility criteria determined using the PICO (Population-Intervention-Comparator-Outcome) framework. Using data extracted from each article, we mapped all known behavioural assays for quantifying anti-predator responses in mammals and examined the context in which each assay has been implemented (e.g., species tested, predator cue characteristics). Finally, with mixed effects modelling, we determined which of these assays and predator cue types elicit the greatest behavioural responses based on standardised difference in response between treatment and control groups.

Review findings: We reviewed 5168 articles, 211 of which were eligible, constituting 1016 studies on 126 mammal species, a quarter of which are threatened by invasive species. We identified six major types of behavioural assays: behavioural focals, capture probability, feeding station, flight initiation distance, giving-up density, and stimulus presentations. Across studies, there were five primary behaviours measured: activity, escape, exploration, foraging, and vigilance. These behaviours yielded similar effect sizes across studies. With regard to study design, however, studies that used natural olfactory cues tended to report larger effect sizes than those that used artificial cues. Effect sizes were larger in studies that analysed sexes individually, rather than combining males and females. Studies that used 'blank' control treatments (the absence of a stimulus) rather than a treatment with a control stimulus had higher effect sizes. Although many studies involved repeat measures of known individuals, only 15.4% of these used their data to calculate measures of individual repeatability.

Conclusions: Our review highlights important aspects of experimental design and reporting that should be considered. Where possible, studies of anti-predator behaviour should use appropriate control treatments, analyse males and females separately, and choose organic predator cues. Studies should also look to report the individual repeatability of behavioural traits, and to correctly identify measures of uncertainty (error bars). The review highlights robust methodology, reveals promising techniques on which to focus future assay development, and collates relevant information for conservation managers.

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CiteScore
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