HOUT PJ VAN DEN (2009) Mortality is the tip of an iceberg of fear: Peregrines Falco peregrines and shorebirds in the Wadden Sea. LIMOSA 82 (3): 122-133.
The recovery of Peregrine populations in the last few
decades triggers the question what impact these raptors
have on shorebirds using the Wadden Sea as a staging or
wintering site. To answer this question, we took advantage
of results of a four-winter study on raptor predation
on shorebirds on the Banc d'Arguin, a key wintering site
for shorebirds on the East-Atlantic Flyway. We suggest
that in the Wadden Sea, as on the Banc d'Arguin, populations
of wintering shorebirds are not regulated through
direct consumption by predators. Instead, raptors may
have a profound intimidating impact on (groups of )
shorebirds, which induces the latter to engage in a wide
spectrum of anti-predation behaviours and body composition
changes. This means that shorebirds pay predation
costs by means of foregone opportunities affecting
their long-term survival and reproduction, rather than by
direct mortality.
In a predator-prey game of anti-predation measures
against stealth, predators will try to exploit vulnerabilities
of their prey. Because of this, especially inexperienced
birds or migrants which are unfamiliar with the
habitat are prone to being depredated. However, also
fattening (spring) migrants may suffer considerable predation
costs, and these may increase in the near future,
as growing numbers of Peregrines breed in the Wadden
Sea region.
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