Authors
Rory P Wilson, Andrew Neate, Mark D Holton, Emily LC Shepard, D Michael Scantlebury, Sergio A Lambertucci, Agustina Di Virgilio, Elaine Crooks, Christina Mulvenna, Nikki Marks
Publication date
2018/12/3
Journal
Current Biology
Volume
28
Issue
23
Pages
3871-3877. e5
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Energy harvesting by animals is important because it provides the power needed for all metabolic processes. Beyond this, efficient food finding enhances individual fitness [1] and population viability [2], although rates of energy accumulation are affected by the environment and food distribution. Typically, differences between individuals in the rate of food acquisition are attributed to varying competencies [3], even though food-encounter rates are known to be probabilistic [4]. We used animal-attached technology to quantify food intake in four disparate free-living vertebrates (condors, cheetahs, penguins, and sheep) and found that inter-individual variability depended critically on the probability of food encounter. We modeled this to reveal that animals taking rarer food, such as apex predators and scavengers, are particularly susceptible to breeding failure because this variability results in larger proportions of the …
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