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Journal ArticleDOI

Vigilance Behaviour in Grazing African Antelopes

R. Underwood
- 01 Jan 1982 - 
- Vol. 79, Iss: 2, pp 81-107
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TLDR
Time spent looking varied with position within the group; this effect was strongest in closed habitats, where central animals tended to scan least and feed most, and within species, animals inclosed habitats, those with dense vegetation, tended to spend more time in looking than did animals in the open.
Abstract
African antelope may devote a large proportion of their foraging time to looking around. The factors affecting such vigilance behaviour are examined for grazing antelope, five species being studied in detail. The proportion of time spent looking decreased as species body weight increased. Within species, animals in closed habitats, those with dense vegetation, tended to spend more time in looking than did animals in the open. There was some evidence that vigilance, presumably for predators, was shared by group members, but in one species, impala, vigilance apparently increased with group size and with proximity to neighbours. Time spent looking varied with position within the group; this effect was strongest in closed habitats, where central animals tended to scan least and feed most. Vigilance increased as feeding success decreased, partly due to mutual interference between looking and feeding. The possible social, foraging and predator-detection values of vigilance are discussed. A simple model is introduced to help explain the effects of cover and to facilitate further discussion.

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Female foraging and male vigilance in white-tailed ptarmigan (Lagopus leucurus): opportunism or behavioural coordination?

TL;DR: Results indicate that each member of a pair may influence the behaviour of the other in pre-incubation pairs of white-tailed ptarmigan, and both sexes behave as though a major role of male vigilance is to enhance female foraging opportunities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Males and females differentially adjust vigilance levels as group size increases: effect on optimal group size

TL;DR: In this article, the authors demonstrate that male and female pheasants, Phasianus colchicus, in harems differentially adjusted their vigilance levels as harem size changed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coral species composition drives key ecosystem function on coral reefs

TL;DR: This work investigates how herbivorous fish assemblages and delivery of two distinct herbivory processes, grazing and browsing, differ among three taxonomically distinct, replicated coral habitats and suggests that maintained functionality may vary among distinct and emerging coral reef configurations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Curious creatures: a multi-taxa investigation of responses to novelty in a zoo environment

TL;DR: By using the measure of curiosity towards novel objects with varying characteristics across a range of zoo species, the authors can see evidence of evolutionary, husbandry and individual influences on their response and uncover factors that nurture the development of curiosity.
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Avoidance behaviour of bats and moths: when is it predator defence?

TL;DR: Some of the methodological difficulties that attend demonstrating that an avoidance behaviour has an anti-predatory function are highlighted, because the arguments most frequently delivered by reviewers have the consequence that it becomes impossible to test the hypothesis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Organisation of Antelope in Relation To Their Ecology

P.J. Jarman
- 01 Jan 1974 - 
TL;DR: The paper describes different feeding styles among antelope, in terms of selection of food items and coverage of home ranges, and argues that these feeding styles bear a relationship to maximum group size of feeding animals through the influence of dispersion ofFood items upon group cohesion.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the advantages of flocking

Book

The Ethology of Predation

TL;DR: This chapter discusses hunting for Prey, the Diversity of Hunting Methods, and the Motivation Underlying Feeding Responses of Predator-Prey Interactions.