4.1 Article

Size-dependent predation risk in cryptic prey

期刊

JOURNAL OF ETHOLOGY
卷 39, 期 2, 页码 191-198

出版社

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10164-021-00691-5

关键词

Camouflage; Aposematism; Crypsis; Disruptive; Body size; Predation

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The study found that attack risk increased with size for disruptive phenotypes of prey, potentially breaking down the effectiveness of disruptive patterns at larger sizes. However, further research under controlled conditions is needed to distinguish the effects of initial detection and post-detection preferences on attack rates.
Visual crypsis of prey is determined by the interaction between an individual's physical appearance to their predators and visual aspects of their environment. Physical size will impact visual appearance and thus potentially influence crypsis. However, research on this topic is limited, leaving the effect of size in cryptic prey largely unexplored. To identify if the success of cryptic phenotypes is size-dependent, we conducted a series of field experiments in which we exposed two types of cryptic artificial prey (uniform colored and disruptively patterned) of different sizes to free-living avian predators and recorded attack rate. Despite similar statistical power and methodology, we found increasing predation risk with increasing size only for disruptive phenotypes. Our results suggest that large sizes may break down ability for disruptive patterns to effectively break up the body outline. However, further research in more controlled conditions would be needed to distinguish the effects of initial detection and post-detection preferences on attack rates.

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