In theory, survival rates and consequent population status might be predictable from instantaneous behavioural measures of how animals prioritize foraging vs. avoiding predation. We show, for the 30 most common small bird species ringed in the UK, that one quarter respond to higher predation risk as if it is mass-dependent and lose mass. Half respond to predation risk as if it only interrupts their foraging and gain mass thus avoiding consequent increased starvation risk from reduced foraging time. These mass responses to higher predation risk are correlated with population and conservation status both within and between species (and independently of foraging habitat, foraging guild, sociality index and size) over the last 30 years in Brita...
1. Vigilance increases fitness by improving predator detection but at the expense of increasing star...
One of the classic ecological questions is how predators affect population size. This is often asses...
House sparrow (Passer domesticus) numbers have declined rapidly in both rural and urban habitats acr...
In theory, survival rates and consequent population status might be predictable from instantaneous b...
It is theoretically and empirically well established that body mass variation in small birds reflect...
Climate change within the UK will affect winter starvation risk because higher temperatures reduce e...
As foraging becomes more unpredictable animals should increase their body reserves to reduce the ris...
1. Individual animals optimize their body mass to enhance fitness and mass is expected to be optimiz...
Predators can affect individual fitness and population and community processes through lethal effect...
International audienceFor passerines the starvation-predation risk theory predicts that birds should...
1. Birds have been shown to lose mass upon predator encounters. This mass loss has generally been as...
For passerines the starvation-predation risk theory predicts that birds should decrease their body m...
Passerines maintain low levels of fat in winter even though larger fat reserves would provide better...
1: Individual animals optimize their body mass to enhance fitness and mass is expected to be optimi...
Theoretical models predict that when having fat reserves is costly in terms of predation risk, birds...
1. Vigilance increases fitness by improving predator detection but at the expense of increasing star...
One of the classic ecological questions is how predators affect population size. This is often asses...
House sparrow (Passer domesticus) numbers have declined rapidly in both rural and urban habitats acr...
In theory, survival rates and consequent population status might be predictable from instantaneous b...
It is theoretically and empirically well established that body mass variation in small birds reflect...
Climate change within the UK will affect winter starvation risk because higher temperatures reduce e...
As foraging becomes more unpredictable animals should increase their body reserves to reduce the ris...
1. Individual animals optimize their body mass to enhance fitness and mass is expected to be optimiz...
Predators can affect individual fitness and population and community processes through lethal effect...
International audienceFor passerines the starvation-predation risk theory predicts that birds should...
1. Birds have been shown to lose mass upon predator encounters. This mass loss has generally been as...
For passerines the starvation-predation risk theory predicts that birds should decrease their body m...
Passerines maintain low levels of fat in winter even though larger fat reserves would provide better...
1: Individual animals optimize their body mass to enhance fitness and mass is expected to be optimi...
Theoretical models predict that when having fat reserves is costly in terms of predation risk, birds...
1. Vigilance increases fitness by improving predator detection but at the expense of increasing star...
One of the classic ecological questions is how predators affect population size. This is often asses...
House sparrow (Passer domesticus) numbers have declined rapidly in both rural and urban habitats acr...