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Does Moonlight Increase Predation Risk for Elusive Mammals in Costa Rica?

Authors :
Ryan T. Botts
Steven R. Blankenship
Michael S. Mooring
Ellen M. Asselin
Timothy J. Wiegman
Abner Rodriguez
Sierra E. Ullrich
Gabrielle R. Allen
Wyatt M. Garley
Abigail P. Wagner
Amy A. Eppert
Source :
Tropical Conservation Science. 13:194008292095240
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2020.

Abstract

An increasing body of evidence indicates that moonlight influences the nocturnal activity patterns of tropical mammals, both predators and prey. One explanation is that brighter moonlight is associated with increased risk of predation (Predation Risk hypothesis), but it has also been proposed that nocturnal activity may be influenced by the sensory ecology of a species, with species that rely on visual detection of food and danger predicted to increase their activity during bright moonlight, while species relying on non-visual senses should decrease activity (Visual Acuity hypothesis). Lack of an objective measure of “visual acuity” has made this second hypothesis difficult to test, therefore we employed a novel approach to better understand the role of lunar illumination in driving activity patterns by using the tapetum lucidum as a proxy for “night vision” acuity. To test the alternative predictions, we analyzed a large dataset from our long-term camera trap study in Costa Rica using activity overlap, relative abundance, and circular statistical techniques. Mixed models explored the influence of illumination factors (moonrise/set, cloud cover, season) and night vision acuity (tapetum type) on nocturnal and lunar phase-related activity patterns. Our results support the underlying assumptions of the predation risk and visual acuity models, but indicate that neither can fully predict lunar-related activity patterns. With diurnal human “super predators” forcing a global increase in activity during the night by mammals, our findings can contribute to a better understanding of nocturnal activity patterns and the development of conservation approaches to mitigate forced temporal niche shifts.

Details

ISSN :
19400829
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tropical Conservation Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........376f42ff95e58c1db4e0f6026d5f8fd7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1940082920952405