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Predators and scavengers are frequently persecuted for their negative effects on property, livestock and human life. Research has shown that these species play important regulatory roles in intact ecosystems including regulating herbivore and mesopredator populations that in turn affect floral, soil and hydrological systems. Yet predators and scavengers receive surprisingly little recognition for their benefits to humans in the landscapes they share. We review these benefits, highlighting the most recent studies that have documented their positive effects across a range of environments. Indeed, the benefits of predators and scavengers can be far reaching, affecting human health and well-being through disease mitigation, agricultural production and waste-disposal services. As many predators and scavengers are in a state of rapid decline, we argue that researchers must work in concert with the media, managers and policymakers to highlight benefits of these species and the need to ensure their long-term conservation. Furthermore, instead of assessing the costs of predators and scavengers only in economic terms, it is critical to recognize their beneficial contributions to human health and well-being. Given the ever-expanding human footprint, it is essential that we construct conservation solutions that allow a wide variety of species to persist in shared landscapes. Identifying, evaluating and communicating the benefits provided by species that are often considered problem animals is an important step for establishing tolerance in these shared spaces.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-017-0421-2 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
August 2025
Laboratory of Nonlinear Analysis and Applied Mathematics, Department of Mathematics, University of Tlemcen, 13000, Tlemcen, Algeria.
In the present article, a prey-predator-scavenger model is proposed and investigated with quadratic harvesting of predator and scavenger populations. The system is assumed to follow the Crowley-Martin functional response to describe the interaction between prey and predator populations. The positivity and boundedness of the system with respect to positive initial conditions are established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Rep
July 2025
Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai, 200438, China.
Plant VIP1 subgroup bZIPs have been characterized, VIP1 orthologs were angiosperm-specific; BdiVIP1A localized in the nucleus and increased plant heat tolerance. In plants, group I basic region/leucine zipper motif (bZIP) transcription factors (TFs), particularly VIP1 and its close homologs (the VIP1 subgroup), play crucial roles in vascular development and osmosensory responses. However, the ancestral origins and evolutionary processes underlying their functional diversity across plant lineages remain poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Lett
July 2025
Departamento de Paleontología de Vertebrados, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Lima, Peru.
Direct evidence of predation and other trophic relationships provide valuable information about trophic interactions between species in palaeo-communities. Data on ecological interactions amongst extant apex predators open a unique opportunity to better understand how sympatric apex predators coexisted or interacted with each other in the past. Here, we describe direct evidence of a predation or scavenging event in which we hypothesize that a medium-sized caiman (possibly ) consumed (either through scavenging or through direct predation) a large terror bird.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2025
Department of Neurology, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas, United States of America.
Cervids susceptible to chronic wasting disease (CWD) are sympatric with multiple other animal species that can interact with infectious prions. Several reports have described the susceptibility of other species to CWD prions, or their potential to transport them. One of these species is the coyote (Canis latrans), which has been previously shown to pass transmission-relevant prion titers in their feces for at least three days after ingesting prion-positive brain material.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiology (Basel)
June 2025
Department of Geomatics and Land Management, Institute of Forest Sciences, Warsaw University of Life Sciences WULS-SGGW, Nowoursynowska 159, 02-776 Warsaw, Poland.
Fires of natural or anthropogenic origin shape some ecosystems on Earth; this disturbance can maintain the landscape and influence many processes like vegetation structure, carbon, and hydrological cycle, climate, and others [...
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