4.5 Article

Vivid birds do not initiate flight sooner despite their potential conspicuousness

Journal

CURRENT ZOOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 4, Pages 773-780

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/czoolo/61.4.773

Keywords

Antipredator behavior; Body size; Coloration; Comparative method; Conspicuousness; Flight Initiation Distance

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Funding

  1. UC Regents Special Fellowship
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship
  3. UCLA Graduate Division
  4. [NSF-DEB-1119660]

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The distance from an approaching threat at which animals initiate flight - flight-initiation distance (FID) - is a sensitive metric of variation in risk, but the effects on FID associated with the risk of possessing highly detectable external coloration are unknown. We tested whether variation in the degree of plumage vividness in birds explained variation in flight-initiation distance. After controlling for body mass, the distance at which the experimental approach began, and phylogenetic relatedness, plumage vividness was not a predictor of FID. Contrary to the expectation that vividness affects risk, and therefore risk assessment, these results suggest that birds do not compensate for greater visual conspicuousness by fleeing sooner from approaching threats

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