Are GUDs Duds Predation Risk Alters Nutrient Preferences in Giving-Up Density Experiments


Meeting Abstract

110-1  Saturday, Jan. 7 13:30 – 13:45  Are GUDs Duds? Predation Risk Alters Nutrient Preferences in Giving-Up Density Experiments MCMAHON, JD*; LASHLEY, MA; BARTON, BT; Mississippi State University ; Mississippi State University ; Mississippi State University jdm1346@msstate.edu

Giving-up density (GUD) experiments are a common technique used to evaluate perceived predation risk. These experiments use food consumption as a proxy for predation risk, assuming greater amounts of food will be left unconsumed as risk perception increases. Implicit to this experimental design is the assumption that the perceived value of a food item does not change across levels of predation risk, so that differences in consumption indicate differences in predation risk. However, recent studies have shown that in some species, including grasshoppers, predation risk elevates metabolic rate and causes them to shift dietary preferences toward carbohydrate-rich (C-rich) foods and away from protein-rich (N-rich) foods. This suggests that the interpretation of GUD experiments may be confounded by perceived food values that change across levels of predation risk. We conducted a series of lab experiments to test the hypothesis that carbohydrates and proteins change in relative importance to prey when facing predation risk, and consequently the GUD framework may over- or under-estimate predation risk depending on the nutrient value of the food used. We presented grasshoppers with two artificial diets (C-rich or N-rich foods) in choice or no-choice trials and found that the presence of spiders reduced consumption of the N-rich food and increased consumption of the C-rich food. Next we conducted a GUD experiment using enclosures stocked with a known number of spiders (0-5) to see how GUD differed between C-rich and N-rich foods. As predicted, GUD of N-rich food increased with spider density, but was invariant when using C-rich food. These results suggest that GUD experiments using a C-rich food may underestimate predation risk, whereas using a N-rich food may overestimate predation risk.

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