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Tail-Flicking, Tail-Flagging, and Tail Position in Ungulates with Special Reference to Black-Tailed Deer

机译:尾巴轻拂,尾巴悬挂和尾巴位置特别参考黑尾鹿

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摘要

Testing the functional significance of antipredator behaviors is exceedingly difficult given their potential dual functions (i.e., conspecific warning and pursuit deterrence), and this task is made even more difficult when the same term is used to describe different behavioral patterns by different authors. Tail movements and rump patch exposure in ungulates are well-documented phenomena, but the functional significance of each has remained elusive. I discuss the confusion in the literature regarding the definition of tail movements, redefine two behavioral patterns and three tail positions, and examine their performance in Columbian black-tailed deer (Odocoileus hemionus columbianus) in response to an approaching human. 'Tail-flicking', the brief swaying of the tail to one side or the other, was most commonly associated with feeding behavior, and 'tail-flagging', the lateral side-to-side movement of the tail in rapid succession, was common during both feeding and alert behaviors. Tail-flicking and tail-flagging: (i) were performed by both calm/foraging deer and alarmed deer; (ii) probably lack naturally selected antipredator function but may have the benefit of providing public information to conspecifics about potential danger, and (iii) likely lay at opposite ends of a continuum of tail movements that are the result of agitation and motor reflexes involved in locomotion, where flagging indicates greater agitation than flicking. Deer held their tail 'erect' during bouts of rapid flight, including stotting and trotting, and erected their tails sooner after flight during more threatening approaches. Tail erection as a behavioral pattern is an antigravity reflex performed when preparing for locomotion and probably lacks antipredator function. However, tail erection likely facilitated the evolution of bright rump patches in ungulates, which were probably shaped by natural selection to serve multiple antipredator or thermoregulatory functions.
机译:考虑到反捕食者行为的潜在双重功能(即特定的警告和追捕威慑),测试反捕食者行为的功能重要性极其困难,当不同作者使用相同的术语来描述不同行为方式时,这项任务就变得更加困难。尾部运动和有蹄类动物的臀部斑块暴露是有据可查的现象,但每种动物的功能意义仍然难以捉摸。我讨论了有关尾巴运动定义的文献上的困惑,重新定义了两种行为模式和三个尾巴位置,并研究了它们在哥伦比亚黑尾鹿(Odocoileus hemionus columbianus)中对接近人类的反应的表现。甩尾是指尾巴向一侧或另一侧的短暂摇摆,这通常与进食行为有关,而甩尾是指尾巴快速连续地侧向左右移动。在喂食和警报行为中都很常见。甩尾和甩尾:(i)由镇定/觅食的鹿和惊恐的鹿进行; (ii)可能缺乏自然选择的抗捕食者功能,但可能有益于向具体人群提供有关潜在危险的公共信息,并且(iii)可能由于连续的尾巴运动而引起相对运动,而尾巴运动是由参与刺激和运动反射引起的运动,其中标记表示比轻弹更大的搅动。鹿在急速飞行中(包括sto足和小跑)保持尾巴的“竖立”,并在更具威胁性的进近中在飞行后较早地竖起尾巴。尾巴竖立作为一种行为模式是在准备运动时进行的反重力反射,可能缺少反掠食者的功能。然而,尾巴的竖起可能促进了有蹄类动物中明亮的臀部斑块的进化,这可能是由于自然选择而形成的,具有多种抗捕食者或温度调节功能。

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  • 来源
    《Ethology》 |2008年第9期|共11页
  • 作者

    Stankowich Theodore;

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  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 动物学;
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  • 入库时间 2022-08-18 10:53:49

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