Indirect Human Influences in Fear Landscapes: Varying Effects of Moonlight on Small Mammal Activity along Man-Made Gradients of Vegetation Structure

Risk of predation is one of the main constraints of small mammal distribution and foraging activity. Aside from numerical effects on population size due to the presence and abundance of predators, indirect cues, such as vegetation structure and moonlight, determine patterns of activity and microhabi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alba Pasquet, Ignasi Torre, Mario Díaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-03-01
Series:Life
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/13/3/681
Description
Summary:Risk of predation is one of the main constraints of small mammal distribution and foraging activity. Aside from numerical effects on population size due to the presence and abundance of predators, indirect cues, such as vegetation structure and moonlight, determine patterns of activity and microhabitat use by small mammals. Indirect cues are expected to interact, as shading provided by vegetation can suppress the effects of changing moonlight. We analyzed the effects of moonlight levels on the activity patterns of three common small mammal species in Mediterranean habitats, and tested whether moonlight effects were modulated by shadowing associated with the development of tall vegetation due to spontaneous afforestation following land abandonment. <i>A. sylvaticus</i>, a strictly nocturnal species, decreased activity under moonlight with no interactive effects of vegetation cover. <i>C. russula</i> showed no activity change with moonlight levels and <i>M. spretus</i> increased activity, although activity in both species was mostly determined by vegetation cover, that favored it. The effects of moonlight on small mammal activity were not homogeneous among species, nor were the interactive effects of man-made gradients of habitat structure, a fact that will produce community changes along vegetation gradients mediated by varying fear landscapes.
ISSN:2075-1729