Search results for "predator-prey"

showing 10 items of 38 documents

Antipredatory function of head shape for vipers and their mimics.

2011

Most research into the adaptive significance of warning signals has focused on the colouration and patterns of prey animals. However, behaviour, odour and body shape can also have signal functions and thereby reduce predators' willingness to attack defended prey. European vipers all have a distinctive triangular head shape; and they are all venomous. Several non-venomous snakes, including the subfamily Natricinae, commonly flatten their heads (also known as head triangulation) when disturbed. The adaptive significance of this potential behavioural mimicry has never been investigated. We experimentally tested if the triangular head shape typical of vipers offers protection against predation.…

kyykäärmeetModels AnatomicScience PolicyAnimal TypesPopulation Dynamicslcsh:MedicineZoologyBiologybehavioural mimicryHead shapePredationkäärmeetBehavioral EcologyNatrix mauraPredator-Prey DynamicsViperaSubfamily NatricinaeViperidaeAnimalsaposematismAnimal behaviorlcsh:ScienceBiologyAnimal ManagementsnakeEvolutionary BiologyMultidisciplinaryAnimal BehaviorEcologyPopulation BiologyEcologyta1184lcsh:RAgricultureBioethicsTriangular head shapeSpecies InteractionsCommunity EcologyEvolutionary EcologyPredatory BehaviorMimicryAnimal Studiesta1181lcsh:QVeterinary ScienceZoologyResearch ArticlePloS one
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Social learning within and across predator species reduces attacks on novel aposematic prey

2020

Abstract To make adaptive foraging decisions, predators need to gather information about the profitability of prey. As well as learning from prey encounters, recent studies show that predators can learn about prey defences by observing the negative foraging experiences of conspecifics. However, predator communities are complex. While observing heterospecifics may increase learning opportunities, we know little about how social information use varies across predator species.Social transmission of avoidance among predators also has potential consequences for defended prey. Conspicuous aposematic prey are assumed to be an easy target for naïve predators, but this cost may be reduced if multipl…

0106 biological sciencesvaroitusväripredator-prey interactionsForagingZoologyAposematism010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceseläinten käyttäytyminenPredationpetoeläimetAnimalsaposematismPasseriformesSocial informationPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsheterospecific informationBehavioural EcologyParussaaliseläimetbiologyconspecific information010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyCyanistespredator–prey interactionsSocial learningbiology.organism_classificationsosiaalinen oppiminensocial learningPredatory Behavior1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyavoidance learningAnimal Science and ZoologyResearch Article
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The Ghost of the Hawk: Top Predator Shaping Bird Communities in Space and Time

2021

Despite the wide recognition that strongly interacting species can influence distributions of other species, species interactions are often disregarded when assessing or projecting biodiversity distributions. In particular, it remains largely uncharted the extent to which the disappearance of a keystone species cast repercussions in the species composition of future communities. We tested whether an avian top predator can exert both positive and negative effects on spatial distribution of other species, and if these effects persist even after the predator disappeared. We acquired bird count data at different distances from occupied and non-occupied nests of Northern goshawks Accipiter genti…

RISKsaaliseläimetCONSEQUENCESCOMPLEXITYpredator-prey interactionsbayesilainen menetelmäecological legacyheterospecific attractionlintukannatpetolinnuteliöyhteisötASSOCIATIONRESILIENCEBayesian community-modelMESOPREDATOR RELEASE1181 Ecology evolutionary biologylinnutPRESENT-DAY FORESTspecies distributionBIODIVERSITYEXTINCTIONSPAST LAND-USEkeystone species
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Voles and weasels in the boreal Fennoscandian small mammal community : What happens if the least weasel disappears due to climate change?

2019

Climate change, habitat loss and fragmentation are major threats for populations and a challenge for individual behavior, interactions and survival. Predator–prey interactions are modified by climate processes. In the northern latitudes, strong seasonality is changing and the main predicted feature is shortening and instability of winter. Vole populations in the boreal Fennoscandia exhibit multiannual cycles. High amplitude peak numbers of voles and dramatic population lows alternate in 3–5‐year cycles shortening from North to South. One key factor, or driver, promoting the population crash and causing extreme extended lows, is suggested to be predation by the least weasel. We review the ar…

0106 biological sciencesFood ChainClimate ChangePopulationClimate changeReviewBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceseläinten käyttäytyminenPredationNestpredator–preycascading effectsMustelidaeAnimals0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyeducationLeast weaselFinlandSwedeneducation.field_of_studyEcologyArvicolinaeNorwaybehavior05 social sciencesmyyrätleast weasellumikko15. Life on landilmastonmuutoksetbiology.organism_classificationpopulaatiodynamiikkasaalistusHabitat destructionclimate change13. Climate actionPopulation cyclekannanvaihtelutAnimal Science and ZoologyVolepopulation cyclespredator-prey
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Evolution of signal diversity: predator-prey interactions and the maintenance of warning colour polymorphism in the wood tiger moth Arctia plantaginis

2017

Aposematic organisms avoid predation by advertising defences with warning signals. The theory of aposematism predicts warning signal uniformity, yet variation in warning coloration is widespread. The chemically defended wood tiger moth Arctia plantaginis shows both geographic variation and local polymorphism in warning coloration. In this thesis, I studied whether predation by local avian predators is driving the evolution of wood tiger moth warning colours. The close relatives of the wood tiger moth designated here to genus Arctia do not show similar colour polymorphism. The wood tiger moth is thus apparently under evolutionary radiation and provides a natural laboratory for observing curr…

varoitusvärimuuntelusiilikkäätpredator-prey interactionsmimikryevoluutioaposematismwarning signal evolutiongeneralizationmimicrysaalistustäpläsiilikäspolymorphism
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Item Response Trees: a recommended method for analyzing categorical data in behavioral studies

2015

Behavioral data are notable for presenting challenges to their statistical analysis, often due to the difficulties in measuring behavior on a quantitative scale. Instead, a range of qualitative alternative responses is recorded. These can often be understood as the outcome of a sequence of binary decisions. For example, faced by a predator, an individual may decide to flee or stay. If it stays, it may decide to freeze or display a threat and if it displays a threat, it may choose from several alternative forms of display. Here we argue that instead of being analyzed using traditional nonparametric statistics or a series of separate analyses split by response categories, this kind of data ca…

escalationpredator-prey interactionsBiologyMachine learningcomputer.software_genreGeneralized linear mixed modelSoftwareethologyrepeatabilityCategorical variableEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbehavioral analysisSequenceta112business.industryScale (chemistry)Nonparametric statisticsRitem response theoryresponse treesOutcome (probability)ordinal dataRange (mathematics)ta1181Animal Science and Zoologycategorical dataArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerGLMMBehavioral Ecology
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Geographic mosaic of selection by avian predators on hindwing warning colour in a polymorphic aposematic moth

2020

AbstractWarning signals are predicted to develop signal monomorphism via positive frequency-dependent selection (+FDS) albeit many aposematic systems exhibit signal polymorphism. To understand this mismatch, we conducted a large-scale predation experiment in four locations, among which the frequencies of hindwing warning coloration of aposematic Arctia plantaginis differ. Here we show that selection by avian predators on warning colour is predicted by local morph frequency and predator community composition. We found +FDS to be strongest in monomorphic Scotland, and in contrast, lowest in polymorphic Finland, where different predators favour different male morphs. +FDS was also found in Geo…

0106 biological sciencespredatorspredator-prey interactionsFrequency-dependent selectionFREQUENCY-DEPENDENT SELECTIONDIVERSITYMoths01 natural sciencesMüllerian mimicrytäpläsiilikäsPredationmuuntelu (biologia)Arctia plantaginisPredatorFinland0303 health sciencesMonomorphismsaaliseläimetluonnonvalintaEcologywood tiger mothVARIABLE SELECTIONDIFFERENTIATIONPOISON FROG1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyMULLERIAN MIMICRYvaroitusväriColorZoologyAposematismBiology010603 evolutionary biologyBirds03 medical and health sciencesArctia plantaginisAposematismPARASEMIAcolour polymorphismpetoeläimetAnimalsaposematismfrequency‐dependent selectionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologysignal variationsignal convergence010604 marine biology & hydrobiologypredator–prey interactionsEVOLUTIONSIGNALScotlandCommunity compositionPredatory Behavior
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Olfactory cues and the value of information : Voles interpret cues differently based on recent predator encounters

2018

Prey strategically respond to the risk of predation by varying their behavior while balancing the tradeoffs of food and safety. We present here an experiment that tests the way the same indirect cues of predation risk are interpreted by bank voles, Myodes glareolus, as the game changes through exposure to a caged weasel. Using optimal patch use, we asked wild-caught voles to rank the risk they perceived. We measured their response to olfactory cues in the form of weasel bedding, a sham control in the form of rabbit bedding, and an odor-free control. We repeated the interviews in a chronological order to test the change in response, i.e., the changes in the value of the information. We found…

saaliseläimetpredator-prey interactionsEvolutionary Game 28 Theoryevoluutiobiologiapetoeläimetgiving-up densityperceived risksaalistusY-maze
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Colour alone matters : no predator generalization among morphs of an aposematic moth

2018

Local warning colour polymorphism, frequently observed in aposematic organisms, is evolutionarily puzzling. This is because variation in aposematic signals is expected to be selected against due to predators' difficulties associating several signals with a given unprofitable prey. One possible explanation for the existence of such variation is predator generalization, which occurs when predators learn to avoid one form and consequently avoid other sufficiently similar forms, relaxing selection for monomorphic signals. We tested this hypothesis by exposing the three different colour morphs of the aposematic wood tiger moth, Arctia plantaginis, existing in Finland to local wild-caught predato…

varoitusväri0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinepredatorspredator-prey interactionsoppiminengeneralisationta1172ZoologyAposematismBiologywarning coloration010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencestäpläsiilikäsgeneettinen monimuotoisuusPredationpolymorphism03 medical and health sciencesArctia plantaginisGeneralization (learning)petoeläimetmatkiminenmothsjäljittelyPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicswood tigersaaliseläimetWinglearningCyanistesyöperhosetpredator–prey interactionswood tiger mothbiology.organism_classificationpredator generalization030104 developmental biologywarning signalsMimicryta1181Animal Science and ZoologypreyAnimal Behaviour
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Influence of colour, smell and taste on the survival of the wood tiger moth (Arctia plantaginis) adults during predation event

2021

Saalistajien torjumiseksi saalis voi käyttää erilaisia puolustusmekanismeja, jotka stimuloivat useita eri aisteja (ts. multimodaalista signalointia). Esimerkiksi aposemaattiset eliöt puolustautuvat varoitussignaalin lisäksi sekundaarisella puolustuksella. Tässä tutkimuksessa keskityttiin siihen, kuinka täpläsiilikkään (Arctia plantaginis) väritys (genotyypit WW, Wy ovat valkoisia ja yy keltaisia), haju (metoksipyratsiinista) ja maku (pyrrolitsidiinialkaloidista) toimivat puolustuksena lintusaalistajien hyökkäyksiä vastaan. Linnuille tarjottiin kummankin värisiä eläviä siilikkäitä, joita oli manipuloitu niin, että niillä oli joko hajua, makua tai molempia näistä. Näin pystyttiin tutkimaan ku…

varoitusväripredator-prey interactionschemical defencedefence mechanismsyöperhosetwarning colorationalkaloidssaalistusCyanistes caeruleusalkaloiditAposematismmultimodal signallingbirdswarning signalsmothslinnutpredation
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