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Journal ArticleDOI

Training Captive‐Bred or Translocated Animals to Avoid Predators

TLDR
It is concluded that pre-release training has the potential to enhance the expression of preexisting antipredator behavior, and potential training techniques involve classical conditioning procedures in which animals learn that model predators are predictors of aversive events.
Abstract
Animal reintroductions and translocations are potentially important interventions to save species from extinction, but most are unsuccessful. Mortality due to predation is a principal cause of failure. Animals that have been isolated from predators, either throughout their lifetime or over evolutionary time, may no longer express appropriate antipredator behavior. For this reason, conservation biologists are beginning to include antipredator training in pre-release preparation procedures. We describe the evolutionary and ontogenetic circumstances under which antipredator behavior may degenerate or be lost, and we use principles from learning theory to predict which elements can be enhanced or recovered by training. The empirical literature demonstrates that training can improve antipredator skills, but the effectiveness of such interventions is influenced by a number of constraints. We predict that it will be easier to teach animals to cope with predators if they have experienced ontogenetic isolation than if they have undergone evolutionary isolation. Similarly, animals should learn more easily if they have been evolutionarily isolated from some rather than all predators. Training to a novel predator may be more successful if a species has effective responses to similar predators. In contrast, it may be difficult to teach proper avoidance behavior, or to introduce specialized predator-specific responses, if appropriate motor patterns are not already present. We conclude that pre-release training has the potential to enhance the expression of preexisting antipredator behavior. Potential training techniques involve classical conditioning procedures in which animals learn that model predators are predictors of aversive events. However, wildlife managers should be aware that problems, such as the emergence of inappropriate responses, may arise during such training.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Fitness consequences of personality: a meta-analysis

TL;DR: A formal meta-analysis of published studies reporting fitness consequences of single personality dimensions was conducted to identify general trends across species, and found bolder individuals had increased reproductive success, but incurred a survival cost, supporting the hypothesis that variation in boldness was maintained due to a "trade-off" in fitness consequences across contexts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developing the science of reintroduction biology.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the best progress will be made when multidisciplinary teams of resource managers and scientists work in close collaboration and when results from comparative analyses, experiments, and modeling are combined within and among studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predator-prey naïveté, antipredator behavior, and the ecology of predator invasions

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that patterns of community similarity and evolution might explain the variation in novelty advantage that can underlie variation in invasion outcomes, including suggestions for managing invasive predators, predator reintroductions and biological control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social learning and life skills training for hatchery reared fish

TL;DR: New methods and recent findings are reviewed that suggest how social learning protocols could realistically be applied on a large scale to enhance the viability of hatchery fish prior to their release into the wild.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social learning about predators: a review and prospectus.

TL;DR: Evidence for social learning about predators by fish, birds, eutherian mammals, and marsupials is summarized and it is suggested that learning may be faster and more robust in species in which alarm behavior reliably predicts high predatory threat.
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.
Book

Cognition, evolution, and behavior

TL;DR: This chapter discusses Cognition, Evolution and the Study of Behavior, the Behavioral Ecology of Social Learning, and Cognitive Ethology and the Evolution of Mind, which aims to provide a framework for thinking about learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Translocation as a Species Conservation Tool: Status and Strategy

TL;DR: Surveys of recent intentional releases of native birds and mammals to the wild in Australia, Canada, Hawaii, New Zealand, and the United States were conducted to document current activities, identify factors associated with success, and suggest guidelines for enhancing future work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relation of cue to consequence in avoidance learning

TL;DR: An audiovisual stimulus was made contingent upon the rat’s licking at the water spout, thus making it analogous with a gustatory stimulus, which apparently stimuli are selected as cues dependent upon the nature of the subsequent reinforcer.
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