4.7 Article

Evidence for a rule governing the avoidance of superfluous escape flights

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 267, Issue 1444, Pages 733-737

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2000.1064

Keywords

anti-predation behaviour; collective detection; vigilance

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When an imminent attack by a predator on a group of birds is signalled to non-detectors only by the departure of the detector, non-detectors ma!: make time-wasting false-alarm flights in response to mistaken or non-predator-driven departures. The frequency of false-alarm flights might be reduced if group members assess the reason for single departures before responding. Immediate Rights should only occur after multiple simultaneous departures! because these are only likely to be generated by an attack. The response delay between the detectors' departure and the next birds that respond should then be dependent on the number of detectors. On sparrowhawk attack, response delays in redshanks decreased significantly as detector number increased, controlling for raptor conspicuousness and proximity and flock size and spacing. If response delay is modified because of risk dilution, it should increase with Rock size and, consequently, the rate of alarm flights due to mistakes should decrease. However, response delay did not increase and Right frequency due to misidentification of non-raptors or non-predator-driven departures did not decrease with flock size. Significantly more feeding time was lost by birds in small flocks, suggesting that the dilution effect decreased the cost of each false-alarm flight rather than their frequency.

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