排序方式: 共有96条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Junges CM Peltzer PM Lajmanovich RC Attademo AM Cabagna Zenklusen MC Basso A 《Chemosphere》2012,87(11):1348-1354
Contamination of aquatic systems is a major environmental stress that can interfere with predator-prey interactions, altering prey or predator behavior differentially. We determined toxicity parameters of the fungicide trifloxystrobin (TFS) and examined its effects on predation rate, using a fish predator (Synbranchus marmoratus) and four anuran tadpole species as prey (Rhinella arenarum, Physalaemus santafecinus, Leptodactylus latrans, and Elachistocleis bicolor). TFS was not equally toxic to the four tadpole species, E. bicolor being the most sensitive species, followed by P. santafecinus, R. arenarum, and L. latrans. Predation rates were evaluated using different treatments that combined predator and prey exposed or not to this fungicide. TFS would alter the outcome of eel-tadpole interaction by reducing prey movements; thus, prey detection would decrease and therefore tadpole survival would increase. In addition, eels preyed selectively upon non-exposed tadpoles avoiding the exposed ones almost all throughout the period evaluated. Predation rate differed among prey species; such differences were not due to TFS exposure, but to interspecific differences in behavior. The mechanism that would explain TFS-induced reduction in predation rates remains unclear; however, what is clear is that sublethal TFS concentrations have the potential to alter prey behavior, thereby indirectly altering predator-prey interactions. In addition, we consider that predator-prey relationships are measurable responses of toxicant exposure and provide ecological insight into how contaminants modify predator-prey interactions. 相似文献
2.
Andrew?C.?SmithEmail author Shaleyla?Kelez Hannah?M.?Buchanan-Smith 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2004,56(1):18-25
We examine vigilance within a mixed-species troop of saddleback (Saguinus fuscicollis) and moustached (S. mystax) tamarins over a complete year. Saddleback tamarins were consistently more vigilant than moustached tamarins. This may be linked to their preference for lower strata. In accordance with previous studies of other primates, vigilant tamarins of both species were significantly further away from their nearest neighbours, and were also at lower heights in the forest than non-vigilant individuals. There was no observed sex difference in the amount of time spent vigilant. In terms of modes of scanning, the saddleback tamarins looked up significantly more frequently than the moustached tamarins, whereas there was no difference between the species in the frequency of side sweeps. There were no differences between the sexes in the frequencies of either type of vigilant behaviour. The proportion of time spent vigilant was higher than average immediately prior to entering a sleeping site for saddleback tamarins, but not for moustached tamarins. Both species were more vigilant immediately after exiting a sleeping site than at other times of the day. There was significant variation in the amount of time devoted to vigilance over the course of the year. These findings are discussed with respect to the social structure, ecology and main predator threats facing these species.Communicated by D. Watts 相似文献
3.
To detect threats and reduce predation risk prey animals need to be alert. Early predator detection and rapid anti-predatory action increase the likelihood of survival. We investigated how foraging affects predator detection and time to take-off in blue tits (Parus caeruleus) by subjecting them to a simulated raptor attack. To investigate the impact of body posture we compared birds feeding head-down with birds feeding head-up, but could not find any effect of posture on either time to detection or time to take-off. To investigate the impact of orientation we compared birds having their side towards the attacking predator with birds having their back towards it. Predator detection, but not time to take-off, was delayed when the back was oriented towards the predator. We also investigated the impact of foraging task by comparing birds that were either not foraging, foraging on chopped mealworms, or foraging on whole ones. Foraging on chopped mealworms did not delay detection compared to nonforaging showing that foraging does not always restrict vigilance. However, detection was delayed more than 150% when the birds were foraging on whole, live mealworms, which apparently demanded much attention and handling skill. Time to take-off was affected by foraging task in the same way as detection was. We show that when studying foraging and vigilance one must include the difficulty of the foraging task and prey orientation.Communicated by P.A. Bednekoff 相似文献
4.
Frank Götmark 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(1):41-49
Conspicuous color patterns in birds may lead to increased risk of predation. Alternatively, bright birds may be aposematic
or unprofitable prey, which leads to decreased predation. During four autumns, I examined whether the black-and-white plumage
of (stuffed) magpies Pica pica increases or reduces the risk of attack by migrating goshawks Accipiter gentilis. Attack risk was higher for normal magpies than for cryptic, brown magpies whether the mounts were placed near one another
or far apart. However, the brown magpie may have been avoided because of its novelty. For magpies and cryptic jays Garrulus glandarius exposed together, the attack risk was similar. In 2 years, magpie and jay mounts were also exposed far apart. In 1994, with
an invasion of migrating jays, attack risk was much higher for jays than for magpies. In 1995, with a normal density of jays,
hawks attacked the magpies more often. The results demonstrate frequency-dependent prey selection by goshawks, which would
influence any predation cost of bright plumage. The attacks on normally colored magpie mounts suggest that magpies are not
aposematic. Trials with photographs and human observers indicated that normal magpies were somewhat easier to detect than
jays. The plumage of the magpie possibly increases the risk of predation, but may be favoured by sexual or social selection.
Received: 18 January 1996 / Accepted after revision: 6 October 1996 相似文献
5.
Many mammals warn conspecifics with alarm calls about detected predators. These alarm calls are either functionally referential,
urgency based, or they can have multiple functions, including predator deterrence. The taxonomic distribution of these alarm
call systems is uneven, with primates providing the best-known examples for a functionally referential system and rodents
most examples of an urgency-based system. Reports of different alarm call systems in lemurid primates prompted us to examine
the anti-predator behavior of two additional lemur species. In an experimental field study we exposed adult redfronted lemurs
(Eulemur fulvus rufus) and white sifakas (Propithecus verreauxi verreauxi) to playbacks of vocalizations of their main aerial and terrestrial predators, as well as to their own alarm calls given
in response to the presentation of these predators. We scored the subjects' immediate behavioral responses, including alarm
calls, from video recordings made during the first minute following a playback. We found that both species gave specific alarm
calls only in response to raptor playbacks and the corresponding alarm calls, whereas calls given in response to carnivores
and the corresponding alarm calls were also observed in other situations characterized by high arousal. Other behavioral responses,
such as gaze and escape directions, corresponded to the hunting strategies of the two predator classes, suggesting that the
corresponding vocalizations were categorized correctly. These two lemur species, which represent different families, have
therefore independently evolved a mixed alarm call system, characterized by functionally referential calls for diurnal raptors,
but not for carnivores. Electronic supplementary material to this paper can be obtained by using the Springer LINK server
located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00265-001-0436-0
Electronic Publication 相似文献
6.
John Winnie Jr. David Christianson Scott Creel Bruce Maxwell 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2006,61(2):277-289
The risk of predation drives many behavioral responses in prey. However, few studies have directly tested whether predation risk alters the way other variables influence prey behavior. Here we use information theory (Akaike’s Information Criterion, AICc) in a novel way to test the hypothesis that the decision-making rules governing elk behavior are simplified by the presence of wolves. With elk habitat use as the dependent variable, we test whether the number of independent variables (i.e., the size of the models) that best predict this behavior differ when wolves are present vs absent. Thus, we use AICc scores simply to determine the number of variables to which elk respond when making decisions. We measured habitat use using 2,288 locations from GPS collars on 14 elk, over two winters (14 elk winters), in the Gallatin Canyon portion of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. We found that the use of three major habitat components (grass, conifer, sage) was sensitive to many variables on days that wolves were locally absent, with the best models (ΔAICc≤2) averaging 7.4 parameters. In contrast, habitat use was sensitive to few variables on days when wolves were present: the best models averaged only 2.5 parameters. Because fewer variables affect elk behavior in the presence of wolves, we conclude that elk use simpler decision-making rules in the presence of wolves. This simplification of decision-making rules implies that predation risk imposes selection pressures that do not allow prey to respond to other pressures in ways that they otherwise would. If the affected processes are important, then this indirect effect of predation is likely to be important. 相似文献
7.
Risk taking during parental care: a test of three hypotheses applied to the pied flycatcher 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
According to life-history theory, there will often be a conflict between investment in current versus future reproduction.
If a predator appears during breeding, parents must make a compromise between ensuring the growth and survival of offspring
(nest defence, feeding and brooding of young), and reducing the risk of predation to ensure their own survival. We model three
hypotheses for the outcome of this conflict which are particularly relevant for altricial birds. They are not mutually exclusive,
but focus on different costs and benefits. (1) Parental investment is determined by the parents’ own risk of predation. This
hypothesis predicts that a lone parent should take smaller risks than a parent that has a mate. (2) Parental investment is
related to the reproductive value of the offspring: Parents are predicted to take greater risks for larger broods, larger-sized
or older offspring. (3) Finally, we present the new hypothesis that parental investment is related to the harm that offspring
would suffer during a period of no parental care (incubation, brooding, feeding). This hypothesis predicts that parents should
take greater risks for younger offspring, or for offspring in poorer condition, because the marginal benefit of parental care
is largest in such cases. Hence, one may also expect that lone parents should take greater risks than two parents because
their offspring are more in need of care. We tested these hypotheses on the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) by presenting a stuffed predator of the parents (a sparrowhawk, Accipiter nisus) close to the nest when parents were feeding the young. Risk taking was measured as the time that elapsed until the first
visit to the nest. Most support was found for the ‘‘harm to offspring’’ hypothesis. Previous studies have usually measured
the intensity of nest defence against typical nest predators, and have found evidence for the ‘‘reproductive value of offspring’’
hypothesis. However, our model predicts that the importance of the reproductive value of the offspring should decrease relative
to the harm that offspring would suffer if they were not cared for when the predator type changes from a nest predator to
a predator of adults, and when conditions for breeding turn from good to bad.
Received: 13 April 1995/Accepted after revision: 11 March 1996 相似文献
8.
William Post 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1994,35(6):401-407
Female boat-tailed grackles (Quiscalus major) nest in colonies, and apparently settle independently of male activities. Associations between colony females may be mutually beneficial (cooperative hypothesis) or females may be penalized by associating (competitive hypothesis). Contrary to predictions based on either cooperative or competitive behavior, (1) reproductive success was not related to colony size nor to internest distance; (2) intracolony nesting synchronies were the same as those of the whole population, and within colonies, there was no relationship between the timing and spacing of nearest-neighbor nests; and (3) already established females were only occasionally aggressive toward females attempting to settle near them, and their aggressive response was independent of their stage of nesting. The results suggest that females act independently of each other and do not affect each other's fitness (neutral female hypothesis). Colonies may be neutral aggregations in sites secure from ground predators. Although females benefit by co-occupying predator-free sites, advantages and disadvantages of colomality do not appear to be related to intrasexual association. 相似文献
9.
Predation and hunger are threats for most organisms, and appropriate behavioural responses to both factors should be shaped by natural selection. In combination, however, the behavioural demands of predation avoidance and effective foraging often cannot be satisfied at the same time and lead to a conflict within organisms. We examined the behavioural responses of two closely-related species of tadpoles, Rana lessonae and R. esculenta, to simulated predation by fish and hunger. Tadpoles, hatched and reared in the laboratory, were tested in a three-way factorial (predation risk × hunger × species) experiment with four predation levels and four hunger levels. Both species decreased their swimming activity with increasing predation risk. Predation risk did not influence the amount of activity time invested in feeding but caused the tadpoles to spend less time in patches with food. Refuges were not used to avoid predation. R. esculenta was more sensitive to predation risk than R. lessonae. Hunger increased both the activity of tadpoles and the amount of activity time invested in feeding, thus indicating an increased energy intake. No interactions were observed between predation risk and hunger. These results show that tadpoles possess genetically-based behavioural mechanisms that allow them to respond in a graded manner to predation and hunger. However, they did not balance the two conflicting demands of predation avoidance and effective foraging; the two mechanisms appeared to act independently.
Correspondence to: R.D. Semlitsch 相似文献
10.
Crickets can autotomize a limb in order to evade predation; however, this autotomy compromises their escape speed and, therefore,
their ability to avoid subsequent predation events. We recorded two measures of predator-avoidance behaviour in field crickets
(Gryllus bimaculatus) exposed to varying levels of predation threat, with the most extreme level leading to autotomy of a limb. Our first measure
of caution was time to emergence from cover, which was affected by perceived predation treatment, with both autotomized males
and females being significantly more cautious than intact individuals. For males (but not females), the presence of a calling
conspecific encouraged earlier emergence. Our second measure of caution was alteration of male calling behaviour. Autotomized
males remained silent for significantly longer time after disturbance than intact males, but there was no difference in call
rate once they had resumed calling, suggesting that behavioural changes were not merely a result of injury response but a
controlled modification of behaviour as a result of autotomy. These data suggest that autotomy in field crickets results in
altered calling behaviour, which was not significantly altered with different acoustic environments. 相似文献