PhD Candidate, Conservation Sciences Graduate Program
*PhD Defense*
Competition and predation are the most fundamental of species interactions, driving animal behavior, evolution, population dynamics, and, ultimately, the structure and function of ecosystems. Interactions between large carnivores and with their prey can have disproportionately large effects on ecosystem processes due to their position at the top of food chains. However, identifying the causal mechanisms underlying these interactions, and the impact they have on community structure, is complicated by the dynamic, context-dependent nature of species and ecosystems. In other words, no species interaction is created equal. Long-term research provides an avenue to tease apart these interactions and develop a more comprehensive understanding of communities to better inform the conservation and management of diverse ecosystems. I use a blend of camera-trap data and long-term wolf (Canis lupus) and cougar (Puma concolor) radio-collar data from northern Yellowstone National Park, USA to develop a more nuanced, mechanistic understanding of how competition and predation unfold in natural systems. First, I used predation data collected from visiting wolf and cougar GPS-location clusters during 2016–2022 to show that our ability to predict predation versus non-predation events is contingent upon variations in season, predator and prey characteristics, and the modeling approach used. Second, I used 23 years of predation data collected from VHF- and GPS-collared cougars during 1987–2022 to document the causes and consequences of kleptoparasitism of cougar kills by dominant wolf and bear (Ursus spp.) competitors. Finally, I use apex (wolf and cougar) and mesocarnivore (red fox (Vulpes vulpes) and coyote (Canis latrans)) detections from camera-trap data collected during 2020–2023 and apex carnivore predation data from 2016–2023 to demonstrate how the behavior and ecology of different carnivores shapes unique risk-reward landscapes for mesocarnivores co-occurring with apex carnivores.
Jack Rabe is a 5th-year PhD candidate in the University of Minnesota’s Conservation Sciences Graduate Program and working in partnership with the Yellowstone Wolf, Cougar, and Elk Projects. He primarily studies community ecology through the lens of competition and predation dynamics in large mammalian carnivores. He is also deeply interested in sharing science with the world and has served as a Science Communication Fellow with the UMN's College of Biological Sciences. Prior to his work in Yellowstone, Jack received his bachelor's in wildlife science from The Ohio State University; studied ruffed grouse, coyotes, and bobcats in southeastern Ohio, and worked on the Farallon Islands off the coast of San Francisco monitoring breeding seabirds and invasive plants. In following the lives of wolves, cougars, and elk in the Yellowstone backcountry, Jack has hiked enough miles to walk coast-to-coast across America. When he's not hiking or staring at a computer screen, Jack loves cooking, traveling, fly fishing, rock climbing, reading, and playing the guitar poorly.