Title: Vulture culture: dietary specialization of an obligate scavenger |
Authors: Arrondo, Eneko Sebastián-González, Esther Moleón, Marcos Morales-Reyes, Zebensui Gil-Sánchez, José María Cortés-Avizanda, Ainara Ceballos, Olga Donázar, José Antonio Sánchez Zapata, José Antonio |
Editor: The Royal Society |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Biología Aplicada |
Issue Date: 2023-05-03 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/33922 |
Abstract:
Individual dietary variation has important ecological and evolutionary consequences. However, it has been overlooked in many taxa that are thought to
have homogeneous diets. This is the case of vultures, considered merely as
‘carrion eaters’. Given their high degree of sociality, vultures are an excellent
model to investigate how inter-individual transmissible behaviours drive individual dietary variation. Here, we combine GPS-tracking and accelerometers
with an exhaustive fieldwork campaign to identify the individual diet of 55
griffon vultures (Gyps fulvus) from two Spanish populations that partially
overlap in their foraging areas. We found that individuals from the more
humanized population consumed more anthropic resources (e.g. stabled
livestock or rubbish), resulting in more homogeneous diets. By contrast,
individuals from the wilder population consumed more wild ungulates,
increasing their dietary variability. Between sexes, we found that males consumed anthropic resources more than females did. Interestingly, in the
shared foraging area, vultures retained the dietary preference of their original
population, highlighting a strong cultural component. Overall, these results
expand the role of cultural traits in shaping key behaviours and call for the
need of including cultural traits in Optimal Foraging models, especially in
those species that strongly rely on social information while foraging.
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Keywords/Subjects: carrion culture diet Gyps fulvus individual specialization individual variation |
Knowledge area: CDU: Ciencias puras y naturales: Biología |
Type of document: application/pdf |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.1951 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Biología Aplicada
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