In this experiment we tested our model by observing whether an optimal flock size existed for birds at UMBS. Optimal flock size was considered to be the flock size having the highest reward rate (highest foraging rate). We then tested whether the optimal flock sizes differed in different habitats: an open field and a covered forest. We predicted that there would be a larger flock size in the covered site due to increased perceived predation risk from the Sharp-shinned hawk and the Cooper's hawk which prey on birds. Therefore, the difference in optimal flock size between the sites, according to our model, would be due to benefits as the costs are expected to be the same for both sites. We then asked whether birds actually foraged in optima...
Models of population dynamics that include interference competition have often been applied to forag...
Interference competition, the immediately reversible decrease in per capita foraging success with in...
The main tenet of Hamilton's 'selfish herd theory' for the evolution of group living is that individ...
1. How group size affects predator attack and success rate, and so prey vulnerability, is important ...
To assess the survival value of bird flocking, a simulation model was constructed based upon known b...
Competition has long been accepted by the scientific community as the major explanation for all spec...
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/54169/1/2604.pdfDescription of 2604.pdf : Access res...
The selective benefits of living in groups, for example predator confusion and collective detection,...
Competition for a food source and the predation risk in an area are both factors that affect an anim...
Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) can gather in enormous flocks composed of up to millions of birds. Avia...
To test between the contradictory predictions of resource defence theory and a modified hawk-dove mo...
Models of population dynamics that include interference competition have often been applied to forag...
Bird species are hypothesized to join mixed-species flocks (flocks hereon) either for direct foragin...
Mixed-species flocks of foraging birds have been documented from terrestrial habitats all over the w...
Mixed-species flocks of foraging birds have been documented from terrestrial habitats all over the w...
Models of population dynamics that include interference competition have often been applied to forag...
Interference competition, the immediately reversible decrease in per capita foraging success with in...
The main tenet of Hamilton's 'selfish herd theory' for the evolution of group living is that individ...
1. How group size affects predator attack and success rate, and so prey vulnerability, is important ...
To assess the survival value of bird flocking, a simulation model was constructed based upon known b...
Competition has long been accepted by the scientific community as the major explanation for all spec...
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/54169/1/2604.pdfDescription of 2604.pdf : Access res...
The selective benefits of living in groups, for example predator confusion and collective detection,...
Competition for a food source and the predation risk in an area are both factors that affect an anim...
Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) can gather in enormous flocks composed of up to millions of birds. Avia...
To test between the contradictory predictions of resource defence theory and a modified hawk-dove mo...
Models of population dynamics that include interference competition have often been applied to forag...
Bird species are hypothesized to join mixed-species flocks (flocks hereon) either for direct foragin...
Mixed-species flocks of foraging birds have been documented from terrestrial habitats all over the w...
Mixed-species flocks of foraging birds have been documented from terrestrial habitats all over the w...
Models of population dynamics that include interference competition have often been applied to forag...
Interference competition, the immediately reversible decrease in per capita foraging success with in...
The main tenet of Hamilton's 'selfish herd theory' for the evolution of group living is that individ...