Predation Ecology

Predation Ecology

Predation as a force shapes trophic levels and is crucial for ecosystem functioning. Using apex and meso-carnivores as model systems, the CAB lab and collaborators investigate food habits from scats & feeding experiments, direct and indirect effects of predators on herbivores, spatio- temporal partitioning within predator guilds, the role of carrion bonanzas on scavenger communities, and how personalities affect predation behavior.

Peer-reviewed Articles

King E, Chakrabarti S, Lala F et al. The Lion’s Share: Implications of a carnivore’s diet on threatened herbivores in Tsavo, Kenya. Journal Oryx (in press)

P.C : Tsavo Trust

Candler E; Chakrabarti S, Severud W, Bump JK. 2023. Eat or Be Eaten: Implications of potential exploitative competition between wolves and humans across predator-savvy and naïve prey populations. Journal of Ecology & Evolution

Morris A, Smith I, Chakrabarti S, Lala F, Nyaga S, Bump JK. 2023. Eating an Elephant, One Bite at a Time: Predator interactions at Carrion Bonanzas. Food Webs

Bump JK, Gable T, Johnson-Bice S; Chakrabarti S. 2022.Predator Personalities Alter Ecosystem Services. Frontiers in Ecology & Environment, ESA

Featured Cover Article

Chakrabarti S, Jhala YV, Dutta S, Qureshi Q, Kadivar RF, Rana VJ. 2016. Adding constraints to predation through allometric relation of scats to consumption.Journal of Animal Ecology 

Coming Soon

  • Binder W, Rabe J, Lowe Z, Scott G, Lacey C, King E, Stahler D, Chakrabarti S. Walking an Uneven Line:
    species-specific trophic interactions nuance the benefits and burdens for mesocarnivores in Yellowstone
  • Chakrabarti S, Munster A, Gable T et al. Non-consumptive Predation Effect of Wolves on Beavers

Media features

2023 Interview featured in Atlas Obscura