Attack strategies in birds of prey

Pursuit behaviours are vital in predator-prey interactions and in courtship for many flying animals. Existing research on target-directed flight behaviours in insects[1-9], birds[10-12] and bats[13] has aimed at identifying simple geometric rules describing the pursuit-flight trajectories. However,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brighton, C
Other Authors: Taylor, G, Thomas, A
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5287/ora-gaxxryrme
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4e8afdec-3b7b-43b1-a693-166d114c827f
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author Brighton, C
author2 Taylor, G
Thomas, A
author_facet Brighton, C
author_sort Brighton, C
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
description Pursuit behaviours are vital in predator-prey interactions and in courtship for many flying animals. Existing research on target-directed flight behaviours in insects[1-9], birds[10-12] and bats[13] has aimed at identifying simple geometric rules describing the pursuit-flight trajectories. However, these geometric rules are only part of the picture as they only consider the outcome of the commanded changes in flight kinematics, and not the underlying guidance laws (dynamics) which generate these commands. To intercept a target, a pursuer implements a guidance law using sensory feedback to determine the required change in flight velocity, and the resulting kinematics determines the flight geometry. Most of the research until recently has examined insect flight systems, as the ethics of working with birds of prey are more complex and measuring their wide-ranging flight trajectories is difficult. Studies of predator-prey pursuit in birds have only described the geometrical rules for target interception, therefore overlooking the guidance laws which implement them. Therefore the aim of this thesis is to complete the picture by identifying the guidance laws used by birds of prey as they pursue and intercept targets both in the air and on the ground. I used onboard cameras and GPS to study attack flights in peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus), and high-speed ground photogrammetry for attacks in Harris' hawks (Parabuteo unicinctus), to show that two different raptor species effectively implement the same guidance law of pure proportional navigation for intercepting manouevring and non-manouevring prey-targets. Proportional navigation is a feedback law whereby the bird’s line-of-sight rate is fed back, in order to command a turn-rate in proportion to the change in line-of-sight rate, with a constant of proportionality N. Harris’ hawks were found to use this guidance law in its simplest case with an N of approximately 1. This amounts to a pure pursuit course, meaning the bird maintains a heading angle of zero at all ...
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genre_facet Falco peregrinus
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spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:4e8afdec-3b7b-43b1-a693-166d114c827f 2025-01-16T21:48:28+00:00 Attack strategies in birds of prey Brighton, C Taylor, G Thomas, A 2016-06-29 https://doi.org/10.5287/ora-gaxxryrme https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4e8afdec-3b7b-43b1-a693-166d114c827f unknown doi:10.5287/ora-gaxxryrme info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Birds of prey Animal behaviour Guidance Thesis 2016 ftuloxford https://doi.org/10.5287/ora-gaxxryrme 2025-01-08T00:54:54Z Pursuit behaviours are vital in predator-prey interactions and in courtship for many flying animals. Existing research on target-directed flight behaviours in insects[1-9], birds[10-12] and bats[13] has aimed at identifying simple geometric rules describing the pursuit-flight trajectories. However, these geometric rules are only part of the picture as they only consider the outcome of the commanded changes in flight kinematics, and not the underlying guidance laws (dynamics) which generate these commands. To intercept a target, a pursuer implements a guidance law using sensory feedback to determine the required change in flight velocity, and the resulting kinematics determines the flight geometry. Most of the research until recently has examined insect flight systems, as the ethics of working with birds of prey are more complex and measuring their wide-ranging flight trajectories is difficult. Studies of predator-prey pursuit in birds have only described the geometrical rules for target interception, therefore overlooking the guidance laws which implement them. Therefore the aim of this thesis is to complete the picture by identifying the guidance laws used by birds of prey as they pursue and intercept targets both in the air and on the ground. I used onboard cameras and GPS to study attack flights in peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus), and high-speed ground photogrammetry for attacks in Harris' hawks (Parabuteo unicinctus), to show that two different raptor species effectively implement the same guidance law of pure proportional navigation for intercepting manouevring and non-manouevring prey-targets. Proportional navigation is a feedback law whereby the bird’s line-of-sight rate is fed back, in order to command a turn-rate in proportion to the change in line-of-sight rate, with a constant of proportionality N. Harris’ hawks were found to use this guidance law in its simplest case with an N of approximately 1. This amounts to a pure pursuit course, meaning the bird maintains a heading angle of zero at all ... Thesis Falco peregrinus ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
spellingShingle Birds of prey
Animal behaviour
Guidance
Brighton, C
Attack strategies in birds of prey
title Attack strategies in birds of prey
title_full Attack strategies in birds of prey
title_fullStr Attack strategies in birds of prey
title_full_unstemmed Attack strategies in birds of prey
title_short Attack strategies in birds of prey
title_sort attack strategies in birds of prey
topic Birds of prey
Animal behaviour
Guidance
topic_facet Birds of prey
Animal behaviour
Guidance
url https://doi.org/10.5287/ora-gaxxryrme
https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:4e8afdec-3b7b-43b1-a693-166d114c827f