Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon

Collective behaviour often functions to avoid predation, and is therefore especially conspicuous and complex in flocks of birds under attack by raptors. However, studying collective behaviour experimentally in natural conditions is challenging. Here, we used an artificial predator, the RobotFalcon,...

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Main Authors: Storms, Rolf, Carere, Claudio, Verhulst, Simon, Hemelrijk, Charlotte K.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c
https://ecbb22.files.wordpress.com/2022/08/ecbb2022-abstractbook-2022-08-01.pdf
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spelling ftunigroningenpu:oai:pure.rug.nl:publications/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c 2024-06-02T08:12:53+00:00 Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon Storms, Rolf Carere, Claudio Verhulst, Simon Hemelrijk, Charlotte K. 2022-07-22 https://hdl.handle.net/11370/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c https://ecbb22.files.wordpress.com/2022/08/ecbb2022-abstractbook-2022-08-01.pdf eng eng https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Storms , R , Carere , C , Verhulst , S & Hemelrijk , C K 2022 , ' Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon ' , European Conference on Behavioural Biology 2022 , Groningen , Netherlands , 20/07/2022 - 23/07/2022 . conferenceObject 2022 ftunigroningenpu 2024-05-07T21:35:58Z Collective behaviour often functions to avoid predation, and is therefore especially conspicuous and complex in flocks of birds under attack by raptors. However, studying collective behaviour experimentally in natural conditions is challenging. Here, we used an artificial predator, the RobotFalcon, developed after a peregrine falcon, a cosmopolitan raptor hunting a wide variety of birds. We hunted with the RobotFalcon flocks of corvids, gulls, starlings and lapwings in an agricultural area in The Netherlands, while recording the collective escape responses of the flocks with a camera. We compared collective escape responses from the RobotFalcon with those from a drone. Flocks of all species responded to the RobotFalcon most often by collectively turning, compacting and splitting in subflocks. The frequency of collective escape was highest in starlings and corvids and lowest in gulls. For starlings only, we also compared their response to a live peregrine falcon using observational data. Similar to hunts by the real falcons, the collective escape response depended on the level of predatory threat. Flocks of all species except starlings responded less often and less intensively to the drone compared to the RobotFalcon. These results give novel insights in the predator-prey dynamics between raptors and bird flocks, and illustrate how artificial predators can be used to study prey-predator interactions experimentally in the field. Conference Object peregrine falcon University of Groningen research database
institution Open Polar
collection University of Groningen research database
op_collection_id ftunigroningenpu
language English
description Collective behaviour often functions to avoid predation, and is therefore especially conspicuous and complex in flocks of birds under attack by raptors. However, studying collective behaviour experimentally in natural conditions is challenging. Here, we used an artificial predator, the RobotFalcon, developed after a peregrine falcon, a cosmopolitan raptor hunting a wide variety of birds. We hunted with the RobotFalcon flocks of corvids, gulls, starlings and lapwings in an agricultural area in The Netherlands, while recording the collective escape responses of the flocks with a camera. We compared collective escape responses from the RobotFalcon with those from a drone. Flocks of all species responded to the RobotFalcon most often by collectively turning, compacting and splitting in subflocks. The frequency of collective escape was highest in starlings and corvids and lowest in gulls. For starlings only, we also compared their response to a live peregrine falcon using observational data. Similar to hunts by the real falcons, the collective escape response depended on the level of predatory threat. Flocks of all species except starlings responded less often and less intensively to the drone compared to the RobotFalcon. These results give novel insights in the predator-prey dynamics between raptors and bird flocks, and illustrate how artificial predators can be used to study prey-predator interactions experimentally in the field.
format Conference Object
author Storms, Rolf
Carere, Claudio
Verhulst, Simon
Hemelrijk, Charlotte K.
spellingShingle Storms, Rolf
Carere, Claudio
Verhulst, Simon
Hemelrijk, Charlotte K.
Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon
author_facet Storms, Rolf
Carere, Claudio
Verhulst, Simon
Hemelrijk, Charlotte K.
author_sort Storms, Rolf
title Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon
title_short Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon
title_full Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon
title_fullStr Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon
title_sort patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a robotfalcon
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/11370/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c
https://ecbb22.files.wordpress.com/2022/08/ecbb2022-abstractbook-2022-08-01.pdf
genre peregrine falcon
genre_facet peregrine falcon
op_source Storms , R , Carere , C , Verhulst , S & Hemelrijk , C K 2022 , ' Patterns of collective escape of bird flocks under predation by a RobotFalcon ' , European Conference on Behavioural Biology 2022 , Groningen , Netherlands , 20/07/2022 - 23/07/2022 .
op_relation https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/4aa25661-b838-4a83-b90d-f2201b50207c
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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