Effects of risk, cost, and their interaction on optimal escape by nonrefuging Bonaire whiptail lizards, Cnemidophorus murinus |
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Authors: | Cooper, William E., Jr. Perez-Mellado, Valentin Baird, Teresa Baird, Troy A. Caldwell, Janalee P. Vitt, Laurie J. |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Biology, Indiana University-Purdue University at Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne, IN 46805, USA b Departamento de Biologia Animal, Universidad de Salamanca, 37071 Salamanca, Spain c Oklahoma CityCounty Health Department, 921 NE 23rd Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73105, USA d Department of Biology, University of Central Oklahoma, 100 N. University Drive, Edmond, OK 73034, USA e Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History and Department of Zoology, University of Oklahoma, 2401 Chautauqua Avenue, Norman, OK 73072, USA |
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Abstract: | Optimal escape theory seeks to explain variation in the distanceto an approaching predator at which the prey initiates escape(flight initiation distance). Flight initiation distance increaseswhen predators pose a greater threat and decreases when escapecosts increase. Although optimal escape theory has been highlysuccessful, its predictions have been tested primarily for speciesthat escape to discrete refuges, and most studies have focusedon single risk or cost factors. We present data from two experimentsin which two risks or a risk and a cost varied in Bonaire whiptaillizards (Cnemidophorus murinus) that escaped without enteringrefuges. Our data verify several predictions about optimal escapefor nonrefuging lizard prey. Two risk factors, speed and directnessof approach by the predator, interacted. Directly approachedlizards had greater flight initiation distances than did indirectlyapproached lizards when approached rapidly, but shorter flightinitiation distances when approached slowly. Flight initiationdistance was shorter in the presence of food and during slowversus rapid approaches, but contrary to expectation, food presenceand approach speed did not interact. This would be explainedif cost curves are nonlinear or if they are parallel ratherthan intersecting when the predator reaches the prey. More empiricalwork is needed to determine which risk and cost factors actadditively and which act synergistically. The absence of interactionbetween the risk and cost factors suggests that cost curveswere nonlinear. |
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Keywords: | antipredatory behavior behavior escape theory refuge Squamata. |
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