Effect of Group Size on Individual and Collective Vigilance in Greater Rheas
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] D. Ritz. Animal Groups in Three Dimensions: Costs and benefits as a function of group size: Experiments on a swarming mysid Paramesopodopsis rufa Fenton , 1997 .
[2] Pulliam Hr,et al. On the advantages of flocking , 1973 .
[3] P. A. Bednekoff,et al. Re–examining safety in numbers: interactions between risk dilution and collective detection depend upon predator targeting behaviour , 1998, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[4] M. Elgar,et al. PREDATOR VIGILANCE AND GROUP SIZE IN MAMMALS AND BIRDS: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE , 1989, Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.
[5] B. Bertram,et al. Vigilance and group size in ostriches , 1980, Animal Behaviour.
[6] W. Hamilton. Geometry for the selfish herd. , 1971, Journal of theoretical biology.
[7] P. Ward. Why birds in flocks do not coordinate their vigilance periods , 1985 .
[8] M. Elgar,et al. Vigilance and perception of flock size in foraging house sparrows (Passer domesticus L.) , 1984 .
[9] J. Gerard,et al. From individual to collective vigilance in wild boar (Sus scrofa) , 1992 .
[10] J. Parrish,et al. Animal Groups in Three Dimensions: Is the sum of the parts equal to the whole: The conflict between individuality and group membership , 1997 .
[11] Group size and activity in eastern grey kangaroos , 1987, Animal Behaviour.
[13] T. Caraco,et al. Living in groups: is there an optimal group size? , 1984 .
[14] G. Roberts. Why individual vigilance declines as group size increases , 1996, Animal Behaviour.
[15] E. Herrera,et al. Vigilance, group size and social status in capybaras , 1994, Animal Behaviour.
[16] H. Pulliam,et al. On the advantages of flocking. , 1973, Journal of theoretical biology.
[17] Celia M. Lombardi. Feeding and Vigilance in Wild Greater Rhea Harems , 1994 .
[18] N. Metcalfe,et al. Group foraging in wild brown hares: effects of resource distribution and social status , 1985, Animal Behaviour.
[19] C. Clark,et al. The evolutionary advantages of group foraging , 1986 .
[20] Glen E. Woolfenden,et al. A sentinel system in the Florida scrub jay , 1989, Animal Behaviour.
[21] Thomas Caraco,et al. Time Budgeting and Group Size: A Test of Theory , 1979 .
[22] A. Houston,et al. Evolutionarily stable levels of vigilance as a function of group size , 1992, Animal Behaviour.
[23] S. L. Lima,et al. Behavioral decisions made under the risk of predation: a review and prospectus , 1990 .
[24] R. Ferrière,et al. Predictability and chaos in bird vigilant behaviour , 1996, Animal Behaviour.
[25] S. L. Lima,et al. Predation, scramble competition, and the vigilance group size effect in dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis) , 1999, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[26] C. Fitzgibbon. A cost to individuals with reduced vigilance in groups of Thomson's Gazelles hunted by Cheetahs , 1989, Animal Behaviour.
[27] Michael M. Delm. Vigilance for predators: detection and dilution effects , 1990, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.
[28] R. Ferrière,et al. Predictability, chaos and coordination in bird vigilant behaviour , 1999, Animal Behaviour.
[29] S. L. Lima,et al. Back to the basics of anti-predatory vigilance: the group-size effect , 1995, Animal Behaviour.