Journal
ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.9908
Keywords
anti-predator behaviour; elk; foraging behaviour; vigilance; visual ecology
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Most animals need to be vigilant for predators, but group-living animals can benefit from shared vigilance efforts. This study suggests that measuring an animal's blinking rate can provide a meaningful measure of vigilance. The study on captive red deer shows that as group size increases, individuals increase their blink rate, confirming the prediction that vigilance decreases.
Most animals need to spend time being vigilant for predators, at the expense of other activities such as foraging. Group-living animals can benefit from the shared vigilance effort of other group members, with individuals reducing personal vigilance effort as group size increases. Behaviors like active scanning or head lifting are usually used to quantify vigilance but may not be accurate measures of this. We suggest that measuring an animal's blinking rate gives a meaningful measure of vigilance: increased blinking implies reduced vigilance, as the animal cannot detect predators when its eyes are closed. We describe an observational study of a captive population of red deer, where we measured the blinking rates of individual deer from groups of differing sizes (where mean group size ranged between 1 and 42.7 individuals). We demonstrate that as group size increases in red deer, individuals increase their blink rate, confirming the prediction that vigilance should decrease. Blinking is a simple non-invasive measure and offers a useful metric for assessing the welfare of animals experiencing an increase in perceived predation risk or other stressors.
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