| Literature DB >> 31640502 |
Hangjian Ling1,2, Guillam E Mclvor3, Joseph Westley3, Kasper van der Vaart1, Jennifer Yin1, Richard T Vaughan4, Alex Thornton3, Nicholas T Ouellette1.
Abstract
The rapid, cohesive turns of bird flocks are one of the most vivid examples of collective behaviour in nature, and have attracted much research. Three-dimensional imaging techniques now allow us to characterize the kinematics of turning and their group-level consequences in precise detail. We measured the kinematics of flocks of wild jackdaws executing collective turns in two contexts: during transit to roosts and anti-predator mobbing. All flocks reduced their speed during turns, probably because of constraints on individual flight capability. Turn rates increased with the angle of the turn so that the time to complete turns remained constant. We also find that context may alter where turns are initiated in the flocks: for transit flocks in the absence of predators, initiators were located throughout the flocks, but for mobbing flocks with a fixed ground-based predator, they were always located at the front. Moreover, in some transit flocks, initiators were far apart from each other, potentially because of the existence of subgroups and variation in individual interaction ranges. Finally, we find that as the group size increased the information transfer speed initially increased, but rapidly saturated to a constant value. Our results highlight previously unrecognized complexity in turning kinematics and information transfer in social animals.Entities:
Keywords: bird flocks; collective behaviour; collective turns; flight kinematics; information transfer; three-dimensional imaging
Year: 2019 PMID: 31640502 PMCID: PMC6833319 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2019.0450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J R Soc Interface ISSN: 1742-5662 Impact factor: 4.118