Animal groups such as fish schools, bird flocks and insect swarms appear to move so synchronously that they have long been considered egalitarian, leaderless units. In schooling fish, video observations of their spatial-temporal organization have, however, shown that anti-predator manoeuvres are not perfectly synchronous and that individuals have spatial preferences within the school. Nonetheless, when facing life-or-death situations, it is not known whether schooling fish react to a threat following a random or a hierarchically-based order. Using high-speed video analysis, here we show that schooling fish (Golden grey mullet, Liza aurata) evade a threat in a non-random order, therefore individuals that are first or last to react tend to do...
Models of swarming (based on avoidance, alignment and attraction) produce patterns of behaviour also...
The costs and benefits of group living often depend on the spatial position of individuals within gr...
Most pelagic fish live in schools. To allow fast reactions, for instance to predator attacks, these ...
Animal groups such as fish schools, bird flocks and insect swarms appear to move so synchronously th...
International audienceCollective motion phenomena in large groups of social organisms have long fasc...
Collective motion phenomena in large groups of social organisms have long fascinated the observer, e...
Studies of self-organising groups like schools of fish or flocks of birds have sought to uncover the...
Many large-scale animal groups have the ability to react in a rapid and coordinated manner to enviro...
Predation is one of the main evolutionary drivers of social grouping. While it is well appreciated t...
Solitary and schooling banded killifish (Fundulus diaphanus Lesueur) were 'attacked' with a fish pre...
One of the most highly debated questions in the field of animal swarming and social behaviour is the...
Synchronized movements (schooling) emit complex and overlapping sound and pressure curves that might...
Predation is thought to shape the macroscopic properties of animal groups, making moving groups more...
Determining individual-level interactions that govern highly coordinated motion in animal groups or ...
International audienceIn moving animal groups, social interactions play a key role in the ability of...
Models of swarming (based on avoidance, alignment and attraction) produce patterns of behaviour also...
The costs and benefits of group living often depend on the spatial position of individuals within gr...
Most pelagic fish live in schools. To allow fast reactions, for instance to predator attacks, these ...
Animal groups such as fish schools, bird flocks and insect swarms appear to move so synchronously th...
International audienceCollective motion phenomena in large groups of social organisms have long fasc...
Collective motion phenomena in large groups of social organisms have long fascinated the observer, e...
Studies of self-organising groups like schools of fish or flocks of birds have sought to uncover the...
Many large-scale animal groups have the ability to react in a rapid and coordinated manner to enviro...
Predation is one of the main evolutionary drivers of social grouping. While it is well appreciated t...
Solitary and schooling banded killifish (Fundulus diaphanus Lesueur) were 'attacked' with a fish pre...
One of the most highly debated questions in the field of animal swarming and social behaviour is the...
Synchronized movements (schooling) emit complex and overlapping sound and pressure curves that might...
Predation is thought to shape the macroscopic properties of animal groups, making moving groups more...
Determining individual-level interactions that govern highly coordinated motion in animal groups or ...
International audienceIn moving animal groups, social interactions play a key role in the ability of...
Models of swarming (based on avoidance, alignment and attraction) produce patterns of behaviour also...
The costs and benefits of group living often depend on the spatial position of individuals within gr...
Most pelagic fish live in schools. To allow fast reactions, for instance to predator attacks, these ...