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Living in a group • Costs of group living • Benefits of group living – Predation avoidance – Resource acquisition • Optimal group size

Living in a group

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Living in a group. Costs of group living Benefits of group living Predation avoidance Resource acquisition Optimal group size. Costs of group living. Competition for resources Increased risk of parasitism or disease Increased opportunities for reproductive interference or suppression. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Living in a group

Living in a group

• Costs of group living

• Benefits of group living– Predation avoidance– Resource acquisition

• Optimal group size

Page 2: Living in a group

Costs of group living

• Competition for resources

• Increased risk of parasitism or disease

• Increased opportunities for reproductive interference or suppression

Page 3: Living in a group

Competition for food in fieldfares

Nestlings die primarily from starvation

Page 4: Living in a group

Ectoparasitism in cliff swallows

Nests treated with insecticideproduce much larger chicks

Page 5: Living in a group

Reproductive interference

Brood parasitism,Extra-pair copulations

Reproductive suppression

Page 6: Living in a group

Predation avoidance benefits

• Reduce encounter rate with predator– Protected sites– Selfish herd

• Reduce success of predator– Vigilance– Dilution– Confusion, predator-predator interference– Mobbing, cooperative defense

Page 7: Living in a group

Protected sites

Page 8: Living in a group

The selfish herd

Page 9: Living in a group

Predator dilution

Page 10: Living in a group

Vigilance

Page 11: Living in a group

More eyes and ears

Page 12: Living in a group

Predator confusion

Page 13: Living in a group

Predator confusion

As school size of prey increases, capture success decreases

Page 14: Living in a group

Predator interference

“Schreckstoff”

Schreckstoff attracts other pike, which increases handling time

Page 15: Living in a group

Cooperative defense: mobbing

Page 16: Living in a group

Resource access benefits

• Passive attraction to limited resource• Active attraction due to joint benefits

– Reduce path overlap– Information transfer

• information center• producers-scroungers• acquire public information

– Group foraging– Communal hunting

Page 17: Living in a group

Passive attraction

Butterflies at a salt deposit

Page 18: Living in a group

Information transfer?

Page 19: Living in a group

Information transfer in osprey

Page 20: Living in a group

Information transfer in evening bats

Leaders “produce”, followers “scrounge”

Page 21: Living in a group

Two pigeons produced, 14 scrounged

Page 22: Living in a group

The producer-scrounger game

Spice finch were taughtto open lids and wereproducers. Other birdshad to wait to scrounge

Page 23: Living in a group

Public information

• Forager joins group to acquire information about food availability and/or predator risk

• By observing foraging success of others in the group, a naïve forager can estimate the quality of a food patch

• Starlings left empty patches sooner when foraging with a partner than when foraging alone.

Page 24: Living in a group

Public information

Page 25: Living in a group

Reduce path overlap

Proposed for sparrow flocks in Mojave desert. Never been tested.

Page 26: Living in a group

Group foraging

Page 27: Living in a group

Cooperative hunting

Permits capture of prey largerthan possible by singletons

Page 28: Living in a group

Optimal group size

Page 29: Living in a group
Page 30: Living in a group

Group hunting in wild dogs

Larger packs kill larger prey, have higher capture success, and travel shorter distances in a hunt, but must share kills with more members of the group

Page 31: Living in a group

Optimal size of wild dog foraging groups

Page 32: Living in a group

Lion foraging success