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Predator Inspection: Closer Approach as a Way to Improve Assessment of Potential Threats

✍ Scribed by Michael A. Fishman


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
198 KB
Volume
196
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-5193

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✦ Synopsis


When detecting a predator, some prey animals respond in a counterintuitive fashion by approaching, rather than fleeing, that potential threat of extinction. This seemingly paradoxical behavior, known as predator inspection, has been reported for a wide variety of taxa-and therefore can be assumed to be adaptive. However, the view of predator inspection as a paradoxical behavior rests on two implicit assumptions: (a) initial predator detection is unambiguous, with no uncertainty in discriminating between hunting and non-hunting members of predator species, or members of predator species and unrelated phenomena; (b) the costs of flight are negligible relative to the risks of predation. Upon reflection assumption (a) is not really tenable. Whereas assumption (b) is not consistent with experimental evidence [Godin & Crossman (1994) Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 34, 359-366.]. Given that predator detection is ambiguous and the costs of flight are not negligible, a prey individual may benefit by a closer approach to the source of the alarming signals, thus improving its assessment of the situation-despite the increased risk of predation. In this paper, the above statement is given rigor by reformulating the problem in game theoretical terms. The results indicate that a prey will minimize its costs by performing predator inspection whenever its degree of certainty regarding predator identification and/or assessment of its intentions is less than a threshold, which is determined by the model's parameters.