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Predator-Prey Interactions02:39

Predator-Prey Interactions

Predators consume prey for energy. Predators that acquire prey and prey that avoid predation both increase their chances of survival and reproduction (i.e., fitness). Routine predator-prey interactions elicit mutual adaptations that improve predator offenses, such as claws, teeth, and speed, as well as prey defenses, including crypsis, aposematism, and mimicry. Thus, predator-prey interactions resemble an evolutionary arms race.Although predation is commonly associated with carnivory, for...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 6, 2026

A Real-Time Interactive System for Studying Confrontational Pursuit Behavior in Rodents
06:25

A Real-Time Interactive System for Studying Confrontational Pursuit Behavior in Rodents

Published on: May 16, 2025

Coevolution in a one predator-two prey system.

Akihiko Mougi1

  • 1Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan. mougi@bio-math10.biology.kyushu-u.ac.jp

Plos One
|November 19, 2010
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Adding a new prey species to a predator-prey system can destabilize the community. The outcome depends on the invading prey

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Area of Science:

  • Ecology
  • Evolutionary Biology
  • Theoretical Ecology

Background:

  • Predator-prey coevolutionary dynamics are primarily studied through pairwise interactions.
  • Complex community interactions remain less understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate coevolutionary consequences in a one-predator-two-prey system.
  • To analyze how prey invasion impacts system stability and prey evolution.

Main Methods:

  • Modeling a one-predator-two-prey system with evolving predator attack and prey defense abilities.
  • Simulating scenarios with varying initial trait values and invasion timing.

Main Results:

  • Invading prey with initially low defense may stabilize dynamics by evolving lower defenses.
  • Invading prey with defense similar to resident prey can destabilize the system, with resident prey evolution ceasing.
  • Adaptive superiority of invading prey, or invasion into oscillating systems, increases destabilization risk.

Conclusions:

  • Prey invasion into established predator-prey systems frequently leads to community destabilization.
  • The evolutionary trajectory of prey defense critically influences system stability.