| Literature DB >> 26139474 |
Diogo S M Samia1, Anders Pape Møller2, Daniel T Blumstein3.
Abstract
After detecting an approaching predator, animals make a decision when to flee. Prey will initiate flight soon after detecting a predator so as to minimize attentional costs related to on-going monitoring of the whereabouts of the predator. Such costs may compete with foraging and other maintenance activities and hence be larger than the costs of immediate flight. The drivers of interspecific variation in escape strategy are poorly known. Here we investigated the morphological, life history and natural history traits that correlate with variation in avian escape strategy across a sample of 96 species of birds. Brain mass, body size, habitat structure and group size were the main predictors of escape strategy. The direction of the effect of these traits was consistent with selection for a reduction of monitoring costs. Therefore, attentional costs depend on relative brain size, which determines the ability to monitor the whereabouts of potential predators and the difficulty of this task as reflected by habitat and social complexity. Thus brain size, and the cognitive functions associated with it, constitute a general framework for explaining the effects of body size, habitat structure and sociality identified as determinants of avian escape strategy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26139474 PMCID: PMC4490409 DOI: 10.1038/srep11913
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Full and minimum adequate models to explain interspecific variation in escape strategy (Φ) of birds.
| Predictor | Level | Estimate | SE | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full model (AICc = −148.2, | ||||||
| (Intercept) | 0.494 | 0.097 | 5.11 | |||
| Body mass | 0.147 | 0.055 | 2.62 | 0.26 | ||
| Brain mass | −0.355 | 0.090 | −3.94 | 0.38 | ||
| Habitat openness | 0.076 | 0.027 | 2.78 | 0.28 | ||
| Group size | 5–50 individuals | −0.052 | 0.022 | −2.32 | 0.23 | |
| >100 individuals | − 0.097 | 0.034 | −2.85 | 0.28 | ||
| Clutch Size | 0.039 | 0.056 | 0.71 | 0.479 | 0.07 | |
| Capture of live prey | −0.028 | 0.026 | −1.07 | 0.286 | 0.11 | |
| Migratory behaviour | 0.019 | 0.024 | 0.79 | 0.429 | 0.08 | |
| Minimal model (AICc = −153.1, | ||||||
| (Intercept) | 0.469 | 0.091 | 5.19 | |||
| Body mass | 0.162 | 0.052 | 3.14 | 0.31 | ||
| Brain mass | −0.378 | 0.083 | −4.54 | 0.42 | ||
| Habitat openness | 0.083 | 0.026 | 3.19 | 0.31 | ||
| Group size | 5–50 individuals | −0.053 | 0.021 | −2.39 | 0.24 | |
| >100 individuals | −0.081 | 0.031 | −2.53 | 0.25 | ||
Effect sizes are partial correlation coefficients. P-values in bold indicate significance (P < 0.05).
Figure 1Effects of (a) brain mass, (b) body mass, (c) habitat openness, and (d) group size on interspecific escape strategy of birds.
Escape strategy quantified by the phi index (Φ), an effect size metric that measures how immediately prey escape from predators upon detection. Larger Φ-values imply that prey escape at a distance close to the detection distance. Corrected (a) brain mass and corrected (b) body mass are residual values of these variables after controlling for their shared effect and different sizes of points reflect differences in a species’ sample size. Plots c and d show mean ± 95% confidence intervals; the number of species tested at each level is shown.