Proto-cooperation: group hunting sailfish improve hunting success by alternating attacks on grouping prey
暂无分享,去创建一个
Pawel Romanczuk | Jens Krause | Daniel Strömbom | Paolo Domenici | Stefan Krause | J. Krause | J. Herbert-Read | S. Krause | J. Steffensen | R. Kurvers | P. Domenici | S. Marras | D. Strömbom | Alexander D. M. Wilson | P. Romanczuk | Stefano Marras | Ralf H J M Kurvers | Alexander D M Wilson | John F Steffensen | James E Herbert-Read | Pierre Couillaud | P. Couillaud | Pierre Couillaud | J. Herbert‐Read
[1] J. Hoolihan. Horizontal and vertical movements of sailfish (Istiophorus platypterus) in the Arabian Gulf, determined by ultrasonic and pop-up satellite tagging , 2005 .
[2] Leif Nøttestad,et al. Herring schooling manoeuvres in response to killer whale attacks , 1999 .
[3] M. Milinski. TIT FOR TAT in sticklebacks and the evolution of cooperation , 1987, Nature.
[4] Bruce A Carlson,et al. Electric organ discharge patterns during group hunting by a mormyrid fish , 2005, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[5] H. Stone,et al. Solutions to the Public Goods Dilemma in Bacterial Biofilms , 2013, Current Biology.
[6] Craig Packer,et al. The Evolution of Cooperative Hunting , 1988, The American Naturalist.
[7] P. Stander,et al. Cooperative hunting in lions: the role of the individual , 1992, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[8] L. Dugatkin. Cooperation Among Animals: An Evolutionary Perspective , 1997 .
[9] David H. Ellis,et al. Social Foraging Classes in Raptorial Birds , 1993 .
[10] J. Krause,et al. How sailfish use their bills to capture schooling prey , 2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[11] Jens Krause,et al. Not So Fast: Swimming Behavior of Sailfish during Predator-Prey Interactions using High-Speed Video and Accelerometry. , 2015, Integrative and comparative biology.
[12] F. Duncan,et al. Group hunting in a ponerine ant, Leptogenys nitida Smith , 1994, Oecologia.
[13] J. Parrish,et al. Predation on a school of flat-iron herring, Harengula thrissina , 1989 .
[14] Martin A Nowak,et al. Spatial dilemmas of diffusible public goods , 2013, eLife.
[15] R. Connor,et al. A division of labour with role specialization in group–hunting bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) off Cedar Key, Florida , 2005, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[16] J. Parrish. Levels of diurnal predation on a school of flat-iron herring,Harengula thrissina , 1992, Environmental Biology of Fishes.
[17] Harry L. Fierstine,et al. Use of Rostral Characters for Identifying Adult Billfishes (Teleostei: Perciformes: Istiophoridae and Xiphiidae) , 1996 .
[18] J. Krause,et al. Social networks in elasmobranchs and teleost fishes , 2014 .
[19] Andrea Manica,et al. Referential gestures in fish collaborative hunting , 2013, Nature Communications.
[20] J. Steffensen,et al. Effects of temperature, hypoxia and activity on the metabolism of juvenile Atlantic cod , 1997 .
[21] K. Benoit‐Bird. Prey caloric value and predator energy needs: foraging predictions for wild spinner dolphins , 2004 .
[22] Alan M. Wilson,et al. Group hunting within the Carnivora: physiological, cognitive and environmental influences on strategy and cooperation , 2012, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[23] S. Diehl,et al. Piscivore efficiency and refuging prey: the importance of predator search mode , 1994, Oecologia.
[24] P. Domenici,et al. Spacing of wild schooling herring while encircled by killer whales , 2000 .
[25] Sophie Bertrand,et al. Waves of agitation inside anchovy schools observed with multibeam sonar: a way to transmit information in response to predation , 2006 .
[26] Mech Ld,et al. Wolf pack size and food acquisition. , 1997 .
[27] J. Krause,et al. Correction to ‘Proto-cooperation: group hunting sailfish improve hunting success by alternating attacks on grouping prey’ , 2016, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[28] D. Winkler,et al. Flock-feeding on fish schools increases individual success in gulls , 1986, Nature.
[29] Simon A. Levin,et al. Public goods in relation to competition, cooperation, and spite , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[30] Kamran Safi,et al. Experimental evidence for group hunting via eavesdropping in echolocating bats , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[31] Paul W. Webb,et al. Locomotion in the Biology of Large Aquatic Vertebrates , 1990 .
[32] Dean P. Hector,et al. Cooperative Hunting and its Relationship to Foraging Success and Prey Size in an Avian Predator , 2010 .
[33] Y. Tremblay,et al. Effects of successive predator attacks on prey aggregations , 2014, Theoretical Ecology.
[34] Redouan Bshary,et al. On Group Living and Collaborative Hunting in the Yellow Saddle Goatfish (Parupeneus cyclostomus)1 , 2011 .
[35] L. Mech,et al. Wolf Pack Size And Food Acquisition , 1997, The American Naturalist.
[36] S. Creel,et al. Communal hunting and pack size in African wild dogs, Lycaon pictus , 1995, Animal Behaviour.
[37] A. Manica,et al. Fish choose appropriately when and with whom to collaborate , 2014, Current Biology.
[38] P. Domenici,et al. The scaling of locomotor performance in predator-prey encounters: from fish to killer whales. , 2000, Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part A, Molecular & integrative physiology.
[39] Timothy G. Leighton,et al. Trapped within a 'wall of sound': a possible mechanism for the bubble nets of the humpback whales , 2004 .
[40] E. O. Wilson,et al. THE BEGINNINGS OF NOMADIC AND GROUP‐PREDATORY BEHAVIOR IN THE PONERINE ANTS , 1958 .
[41] W. Hamilton,et al. The evolution of cooperation. , 1984, Science.
[42] C. Packer,et al. Group hunting behaviour of lions: a search for cooperation , 1991, Animal Behaviour.
[43] K. Kesavan,et al. Length-weight relationship and morphometrics of the sailfish, Istiophorus platypterus (Shaw & Nodder) from Parangipettai, Southeast coast of India , 2012 .
[44] J. Steele,et al. An experimental study of the oxygen consumption, growth, and metabolism of the COD (Gadus Morhua L.) , 1972 .
[45] C. Packer,et al. Why Lions Form Groups: Food is Not Enough , 1990, The American Naturalist.
[46] T. Waite,et al. Raven scavenging favours group foraging in wolves , 2004, Animal Behaviour.
[47] Chris Carbone,et al. Feeding success in African wild dogs : does kleptoparasitism by spotted hyenas influence hunting group size ? , 1997 .
[48] Douglas P. Chivers,et al. Lionfish predators use flared fin displays to initiate cooperative hunting , 2014, Biology Letters.
[49] A. Klimley,et al. School fidelity and homing synchronicity of yellowfin tuna, Thunnus albacares , 1999 .
[50] C. Guinet,et al. Killer whale predation on bluefin tuna: exploring the hypothesis of the endurance-exhaustion technique , 2007 .
[51] J. R. Brett,et al. 6 – Physiological Energetics , 1979 .
[52] Y. Tremblay,et al. How to capture fish in a school? Effect of successive predator attacks on seabird feeding success. , 2016, The Journal of animal ecology.
[53] Differences in group size and the extent of individual participation in group hunting may contribute to differential prey-size use among social spiders , 2013, Biology Letters.
[54] Pierre Fréon,et al. Review of fish associative behaviour: Toward a generalisation of the meeting point hypothesis , 2000, Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries.
[55] R. Schusterman,et al. Dolphin Cognition and Behavior: A Comparative Approach , 1986 .
[56] P. F. Major,et al. Predator-prey interactions in two schooling fishes, Caranx ignobilis and Stolephorus purpureus , 1978, Animal Behaviour.
[57] Iain D. Couzin,et al. The Dynamics of Coordinated Group Hunting and Collective Information Transfer among Schooling Prey , 2012, Current Biology.
[58] J. Krause,et al. The social organization of fish shoals: a test of the predictive power of laboratory experiments for the field , 2000, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.