The American Naturalist
2019
194
5
E134-E139
10.1086/705242
0003-0147 (impreso), 1537-5323 (electrónico)
alarm call; eavesdropping; information landscape; mixed-species flock; predation risk
Information about predation risk is of fundamental value in biological communities. Because many prey species have shared predators, eavesdropping on other species' alarms is a widely recognized mechanism underlying the formation of mixed-species groups. However, information transfer may vary both across and within groups because some species provide higher-quality information about predators than others. We tested this phenomenon in Amazonian understory mixed-species flocks of birds in which two sentinel species-the bluish-slate antshrike (Thamnomanes schistogynus) and the dusky-throated antshrike (Thamnomanes ardesiacus)-occupy different habitats and provide alarm calls that are used by eavesdropping flock mates. In a playback experiment, two associate species responded significantly more strongly to alarm calls from the same sentinel species, reflecting the greater reliability of information about predator threats that could affect survival and habitat choice. Our work provides evidence of a repeated asymmetry across space in the available information about threats.
© 2019 The University of Chicago
Camerlenghi Ettore , Tellaroli Paola , Griggio Matteo , Martínez Ari E
The University of Chicago Press
Chicago, Illinois, Estados Unidos.
Inglés
Articulo de revista academica