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3 September 2009 Differential Success of Prey Escaping Predators: Tadpole Vulnerability or Predator Selection??
David Álvarez, Alfredo G. Nicieza
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Abstract

Species inhabiting habitats with different predators are expected to show divergent phenotypes for antipredator traits. Here, we used a predator–prey system of dragonfly larvae and tadpoles to determine if vulnerability to a common predator differs in species with contrasting antipredator strategies. We examined the vulnerability of tadpoles of Rana temporaria and Bufo bufo to predation by Aeshna larvae when the two species co-occur in the same arena. Our results demonstrated that tadpoles of Bufo were more vulnerable than tadpoles of Rana despite the observation that dragonfly larvae did not show initial preferences for either prey species. Differences in susceptibility to predation seem to be associated with their low performance in evasive responses. Most important, our data suggest that despite chemical protection that effectively prevented the consumption of B. bufo by Aeshna larvae, injured tadpoles that otherwise had survived are at a high risk of being cannibalized. This loss of survival advantage of a chemical defense is an indirect result of two antipredator responses: the effectiveness of the chemical defense itself and the immobility of refused tadpoles.

2009 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
David Álvarez and Alfredo G. Nicieza "Differential Success of Prey Escaping Predators: Tadpole Vulnerability or Predator Selection??," Copeia 2009(3), 453-457, (3 September 2009). https://doi.org/10.1643/CE-08-105
Received: 16 June 2008; Accepted: 1 February 2009; Published: 3 September 2009
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