Audience effects on alarm calling

Alarm calling may depend not only on the detection of predators but also on other factors, including the social factor which is reviewed here. Several species show that the presence of particular conspecifics, e.g. an audience, is necessary for alarm calling to occur. Thus, the social environment of the prey at the time of predator detection might be crucial in the process of alarm calling. Under what circumstances should audience effects appear? Social modulation of alarm calling should be present when the signal is addressed to other prey and absent when it is addressed to the predator. Whereas this may be correct in some cases, e.g. the snorting of the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), it might be incorrect in other cases, e.g. the terrestrial alarm calling of Belding's ground squirrel (Spermophilus beldingi). Therefore, the intended receiver of alarm calls is one out of a number of factors which might predict the presence of an audience effect. Other factors have to considered such as for ex...

[1]  R. Seyfarth,et al.  Vervet monkey alarm calls: Manipulation through shared information? , 1985 .

[2]  R. H. Yahner Barking in a Primitive Ungulate, Muntiacus reevesi: Function and Adaptiveness , 1980, The American Naturalist.

[3]  P. Sherman Nepotism and the evolution of alarm calls. , 1977, Science.

[4]  K. Lagory The influence of habitat and group characteristics on the alarm and flight response of white-tailed deer , 1987, Animal Behaviour.

[5]  R. Andrew The Motivational Organisation Controlling the Mobbing Calls of the Blackbird (t uRd Us Mer Ula) , 1961 .

[6]  P. Sherman,et al.  The Meaning of Nepotism , 1980, The American Naturalist.

[7]  M. Ficken,et al.  Chickadee alarm calls: Does mate investment pay dividends? , 1979, Animal Behaviour.

[8]  THE ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF ALARM CALLS GIVEN BY SHOREBIRDS ON THEIR WINTER FEEDING GROUNDS , 1976, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[9]  P. Marler,et al.  Avian alarm calling: Is there an audience effect? , 1986, Animal Behaviour.

[10]  Mary-Lou Knight,et al.  The "Pursuit Deterrent" Function of Alarm Signals , 1980, The American Naturalist.

[11]  Alarm Duetting and Pursuit Deterrence in an African Antelope , 1981, The American Naturalist.

[12]  K. Sullivan Selective alarm calling by downy woodpeckers in mixed-species flocks , 1985 .

[13]  P. Marler,et al.  Vervet monkey alarm calls: Semantic communication in a free-ranging primate , 1980, Animal Behaviour.

[14]  Behavioral Responses of Free-Living Hoary Marmots to a Model Golden Eagle , 1979 .

[15]  W. Hamilton Geometry for the selfish herd. , 1971, Journal of theoretical biology.

[16]  Peter Marler,et al.  Audience effects on alarm calling in chickens (Gallus gallus). , 1988 .

[17]  Malcolm L. Hunter,et al.  Directionality of avian vocalizations: a laboratory study , 1986 .

[18]  R. Hinde Factors governing the changes in strength of a partially inborn response, as shown by the mobbing behaviour of the chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs) - I. The nature of the response, and an examination of its course , 1954, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B - Biological Sciences.

[19]  Steve R. Witkin,et al.  The Importance of Directional Sound Radiation in Avian Vocalization , 1977 .