Vigilance Behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

What type of behaviour usually shows vigilance?

A

Raising heads to above shoulder height

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2
Q

Can animals be vigilant while feeding?

A
  • Yes
  • Different animals have different fields of view, depending on their placement of eyes.
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3
Q

Give an example of a species that have a wide field of view to enable them to be vigilant when feeding.

A

Horses
~320°

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4
Q

What is the visual streak in animals?

A

A horizontal area in the retina with many receptors to give max acuity in flat grasslands.

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5
Q

What 3 factors tend to increase vigilance?

A
  • When animals are at a distance from other animals or from cover
  • In a predator-rich environment
  • In mothers with defenceless offspring
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6
Q

What 4 other ways is vigilance affected?

A
  • Presence of sentinels
  • Age & experience
  • Time of day & season
  • Level of starvation (motivation)
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7
Q

What is the main disadvantage of vigilance?

A

Uses time that could be spent on other behaviours, e.g. foraging

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8
Q

What is the advantage of vigilance in groups?

A

Improved predator detection

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9
Q

What is the dilution effect?

A

When the risk to an individual is less so they don’t have to be as vigilant

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10
Q

Give an example of when group vigilance is seen to be effective.

A
  • In pigeon flocks
  • Larger groups = less successful attack rate
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11
Q

Why would individuals in the centre of a group not be as vigilant as others? (4 points).

A
  • Feeding competition is greater.
  • Further from cover which could hide a predator.
  • They can monitor their neighbours.
  • Can’t see surroundings well.
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12
Q

What is the selfish herd effect theory?

A

States that individuals within a population attempt to reduce their predation risk by putting other conspecifics between themselves and predators.

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13
Q

What is the cost of group protection?

A

Competition for food; those on the edge can go hungry

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14
Q

Give an example of a species that demonstrate the selfish herd theory.

A
  • 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.
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15
Q

Is selfish herding beneficial for a group? Give an example.

A
  • 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
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16
Q

What are another 3 main reasons for vigilance other than predator detection?

A
  1. Males can scan for potential mates or competing males.
  2. Vigilance of food sources for potential competition.
  3. Predators scan for prey.