Vigilance Behaviour Flashcards
What type of behaviour usually shows vigilance?
Raising heads to above shoulder height
Can animals be vigilant while feeding?
- Yes
- Different animals have different fields of view, depending on their placement of eyes.
Give an example of a species that have a wide field of view to enable them to be vigilant when feeding.
Horses
~320°
What is the visual streak in animals?
A horizontal area in the retina with many receptors to give max acuity in flat grasslands.
What 3 factors tend to increase vigilance?
- When animals are at a distance from other animals or from cover
- In a predator-rich environment
- In mothers with defenceless offspring
What 4 other ways is vigilance affected?
- Presence of sentinels
- Age & experience
- Time of day & season
- Level of starvation (motivation)
What is the main disadvantage of vigilance?
Uses time that could be spent on other behaviours, e.g. foraging
What is the advantage of vigilance in groups?
Improved predator detection
What is the dilution effect?
When the risk to an individual is less so they don’t have to be as vigilant
Give an example of when group vigilance is seen to be effective.
- In pigeon flocks
- Larger groups = less successful attack rate
Why would individuals in the centre of a group not be as vigilant as others? (4 points).
- Feeding competition is greater.
- Further from cover which could hide a predator.
- They can monitor their neighbours.
- Can’t see surroundings well.
What is the selfish herd effect theory?
States that individuals within a population attempt to reduce their predation risk by putting other conspecifics between themselves and predators.
What is the cost of group protection?
Competition for food; those on the edge can go hungry
Give an example of a species that demonstrate the selfish herd theory.
- Adélie penguins
- Individuals need to decide when to enter water when predators are present.
- They need to enter when most others do and the dilution effect is optimum.
Is selfish herding beneficial for a group? Give an example.
- If the bunched prey are more obvious then no.
- Whirligig beetles, larger groups are more attractive to predators.
- However, in larger groups the predation rate per individual is less