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Mosquito females quantify risk of predation to their progeny when selecting an oviposition site

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TLDR
It is suggested, based on statistical and behavioural factors, that pairwise comparisons, and not simultaneous multiple-choice experiments, are the experimental design of choice to adequately test whether prey can quantify predation risk when selecting habitats.
Abstract
Summary 1. Numerous studies demonstrate that given the dichotomous choice of predator-free habitats vs. habitats containing predators, prey choose predator-free habitats when foraging for food or ovipositing. However, predation risk is rarely dichotomous in nature, and very few studies have assessed whether prey can quantify predation risk when selecting habitats. 2. It was shown previously that gravid females of the mosquito Culiseta longiareolata, when simultaneously offered pools with multiple choices of densities of the predator Notonecta maculata, oviposited more in the zero-predator density pools but oviposited less frequently and similarly across all other densities. This flat oviposition response across various Notonecta densities was in contrast to a decrease in mosquito immature survival with increasing Notonecta density. Here, we reconsider this question with the same species but with a different experimental design; rather than experimentally assessing multiple predator densities simultaneously, we offered only pairwise choices on any given night. Specifically, we offered ovipositing Culiseta females all pairwise combinations from no, low and high predation risk (0, 1 and 4 Notonecta per pool). 3. Overall oviposition was lower when mosquitoes could only choose pools containing Notonecta (1 or 4). In all pairwise comparisons, more females chose pools of lesser predation risk. Thus, gravid females of this species, and probably many other species, can quantify predation risk, and not only assess presence or absence of predation risk, when choosing oviposition sites. 4. This is the first demonstration that an ovipositing female of any species can quantify risk of predation. We suggest, based on statistical and behavioural factors, that pairwise comparisons, and not simultaneous multiple-choice experiments, are the experimental design of choice to adequately test this ability.

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Local contagion and regional compression: habitat selection drives spatially explicit, multiscale dynamics of colonisation in experimental metacommunities.

TL;DR: Here it is experimentally confirmed the role of one context-dependent processes, spatial contagion, functioning at the local scale, and provided the first example of another context- dependent process, habitat compression, functioning in naturally colonised experimental metacommunities.
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Strange parental decisions: fathers of the dyeing poison frog deposit their tadpoles in pools occupied by large cannibals

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Oviposition site choice under conflicting risks demonstrates that aquatic predators drive terrestrial egg-laying

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral decisions made under the risk of predation: a review and prospectus

TL;DR: This work has shown that predation is a major selective force in the evolution of several morphological and behavioral characteristics of animals and the importance of predation during evolutionary time has been underestimated.
Journal ArticleDOI

On territorial behavior and other factors influencing habitat distribution in birds

TL;DR: In this article, the Dickcissel sex ratio is employed as an indirect index of suitability and a sex ratio index was found to be correlated positively with density, consistent with the hypothesis that territorial behavior in males of this species limits their density.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlethal Effects in the Ecology of Predator-Prey Interactions What are the ecological effects of anti-predator decision-making?

Steven L. Lima
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
TL;DR: A perusal of any recent textbook on ecology will not only confirm the importance of predation in modern ecology, but also illustrate the preeminence of the "lethal" perspective on predation.
BookDOI

Mosquitoes and their Control

TL;DR: The key to Female Mosquitoes, key to Male Mosquito Fourth Instar Larvae, and Identification Keys, Morphology, Ecology and Distribution of Important Vector and Nuisance Species are revealed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hazardous duty pay and the foraging cost of predation

TL;DR: The concepts and research associated with measuring fear and its consequences for foraging, including titrating for fear responses in foragers has some well-established applications and holds promise for novel methodologies, concepts and applications are reviewed.
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