Authors
Esteban Fernández-Juricic, Juan Antonio Delgado, Carolina Remacha, María Dolores Jiménez, Vanessa Garcia, Keiko Hori
Publication date
2009/9/1
Journal
Behavioural processes
Volume
82
Issue
1
Pages
67-74
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Collective detection (e.g., enhanced predator detection through the vigilance of conspecifics) is expected to have evolved particularly in social species. However, we assessed the degree to which an avian territorial species (California towhee Pipilo crissalis) would use social cues about predation in a semi-natural assay. We also exposed a social species (house finch Carpodacus mexicanus) to similar conditions. California towhees increased scanning rates when foraging with conspecifics, whereas house finches increased scanning rates when foraging solitarily, suggesting that vigilance in these species is regulated mostly through interference competition and through predation risk, respectively. California towhees did not show early detection, and actually the last detector in the group delayed detection in relation to solitary individuals. House finches benefited from early detection, but the second and last …
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