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Article Dans Une Revue PLoS ONE Année : 2013

Short-Term Behavioural Responses of Impalas in Simulated Antipredator and Social Contexts

Résumé

Prey animals often have to trade off foraging against vigilance. However, vigilance is costly and individuals are
expected to adjust their vigilance and its cost in relation to social cues and their predation risk. To test this, we
conducted playback experiments in the field to study how lions’ (Panthera leo) roars and male impalas’ (Aepyceros
melampus) territorial vocalizations affected the vigilance and foraging behaviours as well as movements of female
impalas. Our results show that impalas adjusted their activities in different ways depending on the vocalizations
broadcast. After lions’ roars were played, female impalas increased their vigilance activity (in particular increasing
their high-cost vigilance – vigilance without chewing), decreased their bite rates and increased their movements,
whereas male impalas’ vocalizations caused females to decrease their vigilance (decreasing their low-cost vigilance
– vigilance while chewing) and increase their movements without affecting their bite rates. Therefore, it appears that
predators’ vocalizations stimulate anti-predator behaviours such as vigilance and movement at the expense of
foraging, whereas males’ vocalizations increase individuals’ displacements at the expense of vigilance. Overall, this
study shows that both predator and social cues have direct effects on the behaviour of gregarious prey and need to
be considered in future studies.

Dates et versions

hal-01502912 , version 1 (06-04-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

François-René Favreau, Olivier Pays, Anne Goldizen, Hervé Fritz. Short-Term Behavioural Responses of Impalas in Simulated Antipredator and Social Contexts. PLoS ONE, 2013, 8, pp.e84970. ⟨10.1371/journal.pone.0084970⟩. ⟨hal-01502912⟩
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