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201317Jul17:14

Spy­ing on neigh­bours is ben­e­fi­cial for animals

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 17 July 2013 | mod­i­fied 30 May 2014
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Ani­mals that have devel­oped the abil­ity to eaves­drop on their neigh­bours may have the edge when it comes to find­ing food and expand­ing their habi­tat, a new study by researchers at The Uni­ver­sity of West­ern Aus­tralia (UWA) has found.

Pied babbler sentinelDr Amanda Rid­ley, a Future Fel­low with UWA’s Cen­tre for Evo­lu­tion­ary Biol­ogy and School of Ani­mal Biol­ogy, said her research, pub­lished online on 8 July in the jour­nal Func­tional Ecol­ogy, was based on stud­ies of wild, free-​living ani­mals in the Kala­hari Desert in south­ern Africa.

Our research shows that a soli­tary bird species gains con­sid­er­able ben­e­fits by fol­low­ing a social bird species that has a well-​organised sen­tinel system
Dr Amanda Rid­ley, Cen­tre for Evo­lu­tion­ary Biol­ogy and School of Ani­mal Biol­ogy, UWA »

“Vocal com­mu­ni­ca­tion has come to light over the last decade as an impor­tant way for infor­ma­tion to be trans­ferred among indi­vid­u­als within species, but rel­a­tively lit­tle atten­tion has been given to unin­ten­tional trans­fer of infor­ma­tion between species, known as eaves­drop­ping. This is sur­pris­ing because eaves­drop­ping is likely to have con­sid­er­able ben­e­fits — espe­cially if indi­vid­u­als can reduce their own efforts in keep­ing an eye out for preda­tors by sim­ply eaves­drop­ping on the alarm calls of oth­ers,” Dr Rid­ley said.

“Our research shows that a soli­tary bird species gains con­sid­er­able ben­e­fits by fol­low­ing a social bird species that has a well-​organised sen­tinel sys­tem (where indi­vid­u­als take turns to stand on guard and warn the rest of the group of approach­ing preda­tors). When eaves­drop­ping, these soli­tary birds can spend more of their time for­ag­ing, less time being vig­i­lant and expand into habi­tat not nor­mally avail­able to them. There­fore the ben­e­fits of eaves­drop­ping are large and can com­pletely change an animal’s behaviour.”

Accord­ing to Dr Rid­ley said the research was impor­tant for sev­eral rea­sons — it revealed that eaves­drop­ping could have an impor­tant influ­ence on ani­mal behav­iour and com­mu­nity struc­ture (because eaves­drop­pers fol­low those that give reli­able alarm calls) and it also revealed that eaves­drop­ping had con­sid­er­able eco­log­i­cal ben­e­fits, allow­ing habi­tat expan­sion and greater for­ag­ing efficiency.

In the long-​term, these ben­e­fits could influ­ence the sur­vival and repro­duc­tive suc­cess of eaves­drop­ping individuals.

(Source: The Uni­ver­sity of West­ern Aus­tralia media state­ment, 12.07.2013; Wikipedia)

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