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Predator hunting behaviour and prey vulnerability
Article first published online: 6 JAN 2004
DOI: 10.1046/j.0021-8790.2004.00787.x
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How to Cite
Quinn, J. L. and Cresswell, W. (2004), Predator hunting behaviour and prey vulnerability. Journal of Animal Ecology, 73: 143–154. doi: 10.1046/j.0021-8790.2004.00787.x
Publication History
- Issue published online: 6 JAN 2004
- Article first published online: 6 JAN 2004
- Received 19 March 2003; accepted 16 July 2003
- Abstract
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Keywords:
- attack success;
- predation;
- prey availability;
- redshank;
- sparrowhawk;
- vigilance
Summary
- 1Game theoretic models of how animals manage predation risk have begun to describe predator responses to prey behaviour relatively recently. This is partly because our understanding of how terrestrial predators select vertebrate prey is often limited to numerical and functional responses to measures of prey abundance. Prey vulnerability, however, may improve our understanding of predation because predators could maximize foraging success by selecting prey on this basis.
- 2We tested the hypothesis that sparrowhawks (Accipiter nisus L.), a typical generalist predator, hunt redshanks (Tringa totanus L.), a favoured prey species on coastal shores, primarily on the basis of their vulnerability rather than their abundance.
- 3Five direct measures or indicators of redshank behaviour predicted sparrowhawk attack success in a multipredictor statistical model and therefore serve as measures of redshank vulnerability.
- 4These and other vulnerability measures influenced whether sparrowhawks decided to hunt redshanks on saltmarsh habitat. A model that included most of these measures predicted correctly whether sparrowhawks hunted redshanks (attack decision) 90% of the time and accounted for up to 75% of variation. Prey abundance accounted for no additional variation.
- 5Thus the hunting behaviour of some predators can only be predicted well by several highly dynamic and interacting factors related to prey vulnerability. These results mean that, theoretically at least, the management of prey populations may sometimes be achieved best by manipulating prey vulnerability, rather than by culling their predators.

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