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Making heads turn: association between head movements during vigilance and perceived predation risk in brown-headed cowbird flocks

机译:使头转弯:警惕期间头部运动与棕头牛bird群中感知到的捕食风险之间的关联

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Models of antipredator vigilance show that animals should be more vigilant when in smaller groups, when neighbours are farther away, and when they occur at the edge rather than at the centre of a group. However, models fail to specify how animals are expected to look out for threats while actually scanning. We suggest that head movements during scanning may represent a way that animals can control the value of scanning while in groups. Head movements can be used to increase visual coverage (visual search) as well as bring features of the environment to more sensitive parts of the eyes (visual fixation). We conducted a seminatural experiment with brown-headed cowbirds, Molothrus ater, in which we manipulated group size and neighbour distance, and recorded vigilance for peripheral and central individuals. During scanning, the rate of head movements by peripheral individuals increased, probably to enhance visual coverage due to their higher perceived risk of predation. However, individuals that were farther apart and in smaller groups used a different scanning strategy by reducing their rate of head movements (e.g. increased the averaged time they spent holding a given head position steady), probably to fixate their gaze longer on neighbours. Visual fixation may be useful for obtaining social information about predation threats from the behaviour of groupmates. We show that (1) a vigilance metric associated with head movement behaviour, which is attuned to the visual system of a species, can provide novel information about vigilance in groups, and that (2) birds have different head movement strategies, probably associated with different visual targets, when the risk of predation is higher.
机译:反捕食者警惕性模型显示,当动物处于较小的群体,邻近的邻居更远,以及它们出现在群体的边缘而不是中心时,它们应该更加保持警惕。但是,模型无法指定期望动物在实际扫描时如何注意威胁。我们建议扫描过程中头部的运动可能代表一种动物可以成群地控制扫描值的方式。头部运动可用于增加视觉覆盖范围(视觉搜索),并将环境特征带到眼睛的较敏感部位(视觉固定)。我们对棕头牛bird Molothrus ater进行了半自然实验,在其中我们控制了群体大小和邻居距离,并记录了周围和中枢个体的警惕性。在扫描过程中,外围人的头部运动速度增加了,这可能是由于他们更高的被捕食风险而增强了视觉覆盖度。但是,相距较远的人和较小的人群通过降低头部的移动速度(例如,增加他们稳定保持给定的头部位置所花费的平均时间)而采用了不同的扫描策略,这可能会使他们的视线停留在邻居身上的时间更长。目视注视可能对于从队友的行为中获取有关捕食威胁的社会信息很有用。我们证明(1)与头部运动行为相关的警惕性指标与某物种的视觉系统相协调,可以提供关于群体警惕性的新颖信息,并且(2)鸟类具有不同的头部运动策略,可能与当掠食的风险更高时,视觉目标也会有所不同。

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