Predator Lethality, Optimal Escape Behavior, and Autotomy

  • Cooper, William E., Jr.
  • Frederick, W. G.
Publication date
January 2010
Publisher
Opus: Research \u26 Creativity at IPFW

Abstract

Flight initiation distance is the distance separating predator and prey when escape begins. The optimal flight initiation distance occurs where expected postencounter fitness is maximized, which depends on the prey\u27s initial fitness, benefits obtainable by not fleeing, energetic escape costs, and expected fitness loss due to predation risk. In current optimal escape theory, prey die when contacted by a predator. We explore effects of variable lethality, L, the probability of being killed on contact. Optimal flight initiation distance increases as lethality increases, matching expectations that prey should not flee when contact entails no fitness loss but should be increasingly wary as expected fitness loss on contact increases. Addition ...

Extracted data

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