nena masthead
NENA Home Staff & Editors For Readers For Authors

Evidence of Intraguild Predation in a Snake Assemblage: Bigger Seems Better

Jason Dallas1,2,*, Walter E. Meshaka Jr.3, and Pablo R. Delis1

1Department of Biology, Shippensburg University, 1871 Old Main Drive, Shippensburg, PA 17257. 2Current address - Department of Biological Sciences, Southern Illinois University, 1125 Lincoln Drive, Carbondale, IL 62901. 3Section of Zoology and Botany, State Museum of Pennsylvania, 300 North Street, Harrisburg, PA 17120. *Corresponding author.

Northeastern Naturalist, Volume 28, Issue 3 (2021): 248–260

Abstract
Intraguild predation can play a significant role in structuring species composition with intraguild prey under both competitive and predatory pressure from intraguild predators. How intraguild prey are able to persist at sites with their predators is a complex issue with empirical evidence not always supporting theoretical models, indicating a need for more in situ research. A prominent grassland predator in the south central region of Pennsylvania, Coluber constrictor constrictor (Northern Black Racer), co-occurs with potential prey snakes including Lampropeltis triangulum (Eastern Milksnake) and Thamnophis sirtalis sirtalis (Eastern Gartersnake). Starting in 2008, this 7-year study examined how intraguild predation may differentially influence the body size and demographic traits of prey species in south-central Pennsylvania at sites with and without Northern Black Racers. The body size of adult Eastern Milksnakes was unaffected by the presence of racers. Eastern Milksnakes were more abundant, but with fewer juveniles, at racer-present sites. Adult female Eastern Gartersnakes were larger in body size, and adult males were less frequently encountered, in racer-present sites. These results indicate that intraguild predation in a snake community may affect the body size and demographic traits of prey species differentially, likely through predatory exclusion. However, the exact mechanisms behind our findings, and the resulting dynamics of snake diversity, are unclear and require further analyses.

pdf iconDownload Full-text pdf (Accessible only to subscribers. To subscribe click here.)

 

 



Access Journal Content

Open access browsing of table of contents and abstract pages. Full text pdfs available for download for subscribers.

Issue-in-Progress: Vol. 31 (2) ... early view

Current Issue: Vol. 31(1)
NENA 30(2)

Check out NENA's latest Monograph:

Monograph 23
NENA monograph 23

All Regular Issues

Monographs

Special Issues

 

submit

 

subscribe

 

JSTOR logoClarivate logoWeb of science logoBioOne logo EbscoHOST logoProQuest logo