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Do nocturnal birds use acoustic and visual cues to avoid predation by bats?

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INTEGRATIVE ZOOLOGY
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1749-4877.12747

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anti-predation behavior; nocturnal animals; sensory cues; sensory defenses

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Anti-predation strategies are important for animal survival and understanding predator-prey interactions. Limited studies have been conducted on the anti-predation behavior of nocturnal animals, specifically birds. This study shows that nocturnal passerine birds are not able to detect bats using auditory or visual cues, but instead only exhibit evasive flight behavior when bats approach or touch them.
Anti-predation strategies are critical to animal survival and are fundamental to deciphering predator-prey interactions. As an important defense strategy, sensory predator detection (such as through acoustic and visual cues) enables animals to assess predation risk and execute predator-avoidance behavior; however, there are limited studies on the anti-predation behavior of nocturnal animals. The prey of bats provides an excellent representative system for examining the anti-predation behavior of nocturnal animals. Here, we broadcasted different types of echolocation calls of the bird-eating bat Ia io to two wild passerine birds, namely, Zosterops japonicus and Sinosuthora webbiana, that are preyed upon by I. io, and presented the birds with individual bats under different light intensities. The results showed that both bird species were able to perceive the low-frequency audible portion of the bats' echolocation calls; however, they did not exhibit escape responses to the acoustic stimuli. In the dark and under moonlit conditions, both bird species were unable to respond to active bats at close range and the birds only exhibited evasive flight behavior when bats approached or touched them. These results suggest that nocturnal passerine birds may not be able to use acoustic or visual cues to detect bats and adopt evasive maneuvers to avoid predation. This work suggests that bat predation pressure may not elicit primary predator-avoidance responses in nocturnal passerine birds. The results provide new insights into the anti-predation behavior of nocturnal animals.

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