• Title of article

    RESPONSE OF COYOTES TO AVIAN DISTRESS CALLS: TESTING THE STARTLE-PREDATOR AND PREDATOR-ATTRACTION HYPOTHESES

  • Author/Authors

    WISE، KRISTI K. نويسنده , , R.CONOVER، MICHAEL نويسنده , , KNOWLTON، FREDERICK F. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    -934
  • From page
    935
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    We tested two hypotheses proposed to explain why many birds emit distress calls when in the grasp of a predator: the startle-predalor and predator-attraction hypotheses. Responses of captive coyotes to a starling distress call were compared between no-call and call trials to determine whether coyotes are starded by the call, and if so. whether they habituated to it. The coyotes were then paired and re-lesteci to determine whether the call incites a second coyote to approach and interfere with the attack of the initial coyote. Most coyotes exhibited a startle response during their first exposure to the distress call, their tolal startle response and total attack time significantly increased, and number of tugs on the prey significantly decreased in initial response to the call. However, distress calls may only startle naive or inexperienced predators because the coyotes habituated rapidly to the distress call playback. Although coyotes were altracted by the starling distress call. this study provided no evidence indicating that the call caused attracted coyotes to disrupt the attack of the first coyote. Furthermore, when an attracted coyote physically interfered, it frequently induced an intensitied attack on the prey by the first coyote.
  • Keywords
    siamang , Hylobates syndactylus , gibbons. , pair bond
  • Journal title
    BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
  • Record number

    21344