Birds face the challenge of avoiding predators, yet the postural adjustments they use to aid their thermoregulation (resting the bill on their back plumage and standing on one leg), may diminish their capacity to detect and escape from approaching predators. This may lead to a temperature-mediated trade-off between anti-predator and thermoregulatory behaviour. In this study, I examined the effect of posture, orientation of the bird relative to their ‘blind spot’ (gap in their visual field) and temperature on the alert and escape distances of ten shorebird species to an approaching threat (273 experiments or ‘approaches’). I predicted that: 1) heat-conserving postures would be associated with shorter FIDs (flight init...