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Risk‐taking and the evolution of mechanisms for rapid escape from predators
Authors:A P Møller  C I Vágási  P L Pap
Institution:1. Laboratoire D'ecologie, Systématique Et Evolution, Cnrs Umr 8079, Université Paris‐Sud, , Orsay Cedex, France;2. Evolutionary Ecology Group, Hungarian Department Of Biology And Ecology, Babe?‐Bolyai University, , Cluj Napoca, Romania;3. MTA‐DE “Lendület” , Behavioural Ecology Research Group, Department Of Evolutionary Zoology, University Of Debrecen, , Debrecen, Hungary
Abstract:Flight initiation distance (FID) is the distance at which an individual animal takes flight when approached by a human. This behavioural measure of risk‐taking reflects the risk of being captured by real predators, and it correlates with a range of life history traits, as expected if flight distance optimizes risk of predation. Given that FID provides information on risk of predation, we should expect that physiological and morphological mechanisms that facilitate flight and escape predict interspecific variation in flight distance. Haematocrit is a measure of packed red blood cell volume and as such indicates the oxygen transport ability and hence the flight muscle contracting reaction of an individual. Therefore, we predicted that species with short flight distances, that allow close proximity between a potential prey individual and a predator, would have high haematocrit. Furthermore, we predicted that species with large wing areas and hence relatively low costs of flight and species with large aspect ratios and hence high manoeuvrability would have evolved long flight speed. Consistent with these predictions, we found in a sample of 63 species of birds that species with long flight distances for their body size had low levels of haematocrit and large wing areas and aspect ratios. These findings provide evidence consistent with the evolution of risk‐taking behaviour being underpinned by physiological and morphological mechanisms that facilitate escape from predators and add to our understanding of predator–prey coevolution.
Keywords:anti‐predator behaviour  aspect ratio  flight initiation distance  haematocrit  wing area
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