Photo Evidence of Pumas' Ecological Impact Found in Study

University of Illinois
Camera-trap photo of several pumas in the wild.

A new study adds to the evidence that apex predators like pumas play a unique role in ecosystems that is not fulfilled by smaller carnivores.

Camera-trap photo courtesy Alex Avrin

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A camera-trap study of two ecosystems – one with pumas and one without – adds to scientists' understanding of the many ways apex predators influence the abundance, diversity and habits of other animals, including smaller carnivores.

Reported in the journal Ecosphere, the study followed multiple members of the order Carnivora, looking at how the largest carnivore in each locale influenced the behavior and presence of other animals in the same vicinity.

Study lead author Alex Avrin.

Study lead author Alex Avrin.

Photo courtesy Alex Avrin

"Nobody's really looked at how the whole carnivore community changes when you lose that top predator," said Alex Avrin, who led the research as an M.S. student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign with Max Allen, a research scientist at the Illinois Natural History Survey and professor of natural resources and environmental sciences at the U. of I. Avrin is now a scientist with the California Fish and Wildlife Service.

Previous studies have shown that pumas tend to suppress populations of medium-sized carnivores like coyotes, which do their best to avoid pumas, Avrin said. Reduced coyote populations allow other medium-sized carnivores to flourish. This has a cascading effect on many other species.

Camera-trap photo of a coyote.

When pumas disappear, other carnivores, like this coyote, function as the top predator. But their influence on other carnivore species is distinctly different than that of pumas, a study finds.

Camera-trap photo courtesy Max Allen

Pumas also leave behind a lot of carrion, allowing a host of scavengers – from microbes to birds and other animals – to feast on the remains that the pumas don't consume, Avrin said. Coyotes tend to target smaller species and eat most of what they kill, leaving less behind for other creatures.

The researchers wanted to compare the dynamics of ecosystems with and without pumas.

Photo of a striped skunk.

Striped skunks were more likely to use areas frequented by pumas, but not those used by coyotes.

Photo by Michael Jeffords and Susan Post

"We specifically wanted to look at whether, in the absence of pumas, coyotes step up and fill that role of the apex predator," she said.

Over several weekslong or monthslong sessions between 2011 and 2019, the researchers deployed grids of motion-activated cameras in various locales in the southern Santa Cruz Mountains of California and across the vast military installation of Fort Hood, Texas. The Santa Cruz site has a healthy population of pumas as well as bobcats, gray foxes, raccoons, striped skunks and coyotes. Fort Hood has those same carnivorous mammals except pumas. It also hosts the eastern spotted skunk and the ringtail, a member of the raccoon family. All of these species were included in the new analysis.

"We used the photos to get an idea of which species were at each site, what areas they were using and how frequently we detected them," Avrin said. "And we used a couple of different measures to look at how the smaller carnivores behaved around both the pumas and coyotes."

The two locales were similar enough to make these comparisons, "but of course climate, human land use and other variables differed between the sites," she said.

Camera-trap photo of a gray fox.

The study also evaluated other carnivores, including gray foxes.

Camera-trap photo courtesy Alex Avrin

As expected, the analysis revealed that wherever pumas were present, coyotes were rarely seen. While other carnivores also appeared to avoid pumas, they were much more likely to be detected by the same camera traps as pumas – just at different times. Even bobcats and gray foxes used areas frequented by pumas more often than the researchers expected.

In Fort Hood, where pumas were absent, coyotes had a different effect on the other carnivores.

Camera-trap photo of a bobcat.

Bobcats were more likely to be present at sites also used by pumas, but appeared to avoid coyotes, researchers found.

Camera-trap photo courtesy Alex Avrin

"If coyotes were filling that same apex role that pumas do, we would expect them to suppress bobcats – their next largest competitor – releasing the smaller carnivores," Avrin said. "And what we found is that they really just suppressed everything – bobcats and the other carnivores."

The coyotes appeared to exert less of a suppressive effect on the other carnivores than the pumas had on coyotes, she said.

"This is a correlational study, so we can't say definitively that the absence of pumas caused these other effects," she said. But the study strongly suggests that coyotes do not replace the apex predator in an ecosystem that lacks pumas.

"So yes, when you lose an apex predator, pretty much your whole ecosystem is going to change," Avrin said.

Photo of a raccoon.

Raccoons appear to be more wary of pumas than of coyotes.

Photo by Michael Jeffords and Susan Post

"In the absence of pumas, you'll likely have more intensive grazing by deer, especially in areas near water, which can affect stream flows and other species," she said. "Coyotes, because they can't control those bigger prey populations the same way, don't have the same effect. They likely end up suppressing smaller prey populations, which then changes things in a different way."

"This study gives us a fuller picture of the changes that occur when an apex predator goes missing," Allen said. "While many people think that smaller carnivores can move into the apex role, we see that mesocarnivores like coyotes don't provide the same effects as a true apex predator. This highlights how important it is to keep each species in place for an intact ecological community."

The National Science Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center and the Illinois Natural History Survey supported this research. The INHS is a division of the Prairie Research Institute at the U. of I.

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