TY - JOUR
T1 - Carcass detection and consumption by facultative scavengers in forest ecosystem highlights the value of their ecosystem services
AU - Inagaki, Akino
AU - Allen, Maximilian L.
AU - Maruyama, Tetsuya
AU - Yamazaki, Koji
AU - Tochigi, Kahoko
AU - Naganuma, Tomoko
AU - Koike, Shinsuke
N1 - The authors are grateful to Y. Sugimoto and S. Akutsu for his cooperation with field work. They also thank the members of the Asian Black Bear Research Group and the hunting association in Fujiwara division, Tochigi Prefecture for supporting our study. This work was supported partly by a JSPS KAKENHI Grant (No. 16H04932, No. 16H02555, No. 17H05971, No. 21K19858, No. 21J20185), Institute of Global Innovation Research in TUAT, and grants-in-aid of The Inui Memorial Trust for Research on Animal Science.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Scavenging is a common feeding behavior that provides ecosystem services by removing potentially infectious waste from the landscape. The importance of facultative scavenging is often overlooked, but likely becomes especially important in ecosystems without obligate scavengers. Here, we investigated the ecological function of vertebrate facultative scavengers in removing ungulate carcasses from Japanese forests that lack obligate scavengers. We found that mammals detected carcasses first more often than birds, and that raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) were the most frequent scavenger to first detect carcasses. However, we found no evidence of there being species that signal the location of carrion to other species via social cues. Instead, higher temperatures promoted earlier detection of the carcasses by scavengers, likely related to increased olfactory signals. The carcasses were completely consumed on average in 7.0 days, reasonably similar to other systems regardless of habitat, indicating that facultative scavengers are providing ecosystem services. Larger carcasses tended to take longer to deplete, but carcasses were consumed faster in warmer temperatures. Our results indicate that facultative scavengers were capable of consuming carrion and contributing ecosystem services in a forest ecosystem that lacks obligate scavengers.
AB - Scavenging is a common feeding behavior that provides ecosystem services by removing potentially infectious waste from the landscape. The importance of facultative scavenging is often overlooked, but likely becomes especially important in ecosystems without obligate scavengers. Here, we investigated the ecological function of vertebrate facultative scavengers in removing ungulate carcasses from Japanese forests that lack obligate scavengers. We found that mammals detected carcasses first more often than birds, and that raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) were the most frequent scavenger to first detect carcasses. However, we found no evidence of there being species that signal the location of carrion to other species via social cues. Instead, higher temperatures promoted earlier detection of the carcasses by scavengers, likely related to increased olfactory signals. The carcasses were completely consumed on average in 7.0 days, reasonably similar to other systems regardless of habitat, indicating that facultative scavengers are providing ecosystem services. Larger carcasses tended to take longer to deplete, but carcasses were consumed faster in warmer temperatures. Our results indicate that facultative scavengers were capable of consuming carrion and contributing ecosystem services in a forest ecosystem that lacks obligate scavengers.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41598-022-20465-4
DO - 10.1038/s41598-022-20465-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 36180480
AN - SCOPUS:85139196287
SN - 2045-2322
VL - 12
JO - Scientific reports
JF - Scientific reports
IS - 1
M1 - 16451
ER -