Do individual differences influence flight initiation distance?
Abstract
Flight initiation distance (FID), or the distance between a prey animal and an approaching intruder when the prey initiates its escape, is an important factor in wildlife management. We conducted a study on individually identified yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris) to test 3 key assumptions of FID research: (1) differences in individual responses are small enough so as not to confound results; (2) pseudoreplication may bias results; and (3) habituation and sensitization can be studied without knowledge of individuals. We found that individual identity was not a significant predictor of FID. Furthermore, a moderate degree of pseudoreplication did not significantly affect the results of most analyses. However, individuals differed greatly in their rates of habituation, such that habituation was apparent only when individual identity was known and could not be detected without knowledge of individuals. If our marmot results can be generalized to other species, they suggest that researchers need not be concerned about individual identity when studying variables largely dependent on environmental factors, but that identification of individuals is important for studies of properties of individuals, such as habituation.
Local Knowledge Graph (18 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Holarctic marmots as a factor of biodiversity
Is flight initiation distance associated with longer-term survival in yellow-bellied marmots (<i> Marmota flaviventer </i>)?
Habituation or sensitization? Long-term responses of yellow-bellied marmots to human disturbance
Genetic basis of between-individual and within-individual variance of docility
Data from: Individual life histories: Neither slow nor fast, just diverse
Data from: Cumulative reproductive costs on current reproduction in a wild polytocous mammal
Ecosystem Disturbance and Wildlife Conservation in Western Grasslands
An Ecological Basis for Beaver Management in the Rocky Mountain Region
A Fence Design for Excluding Elk Without Impeding Other Wildlife
Cited By (113 times, 16 in Knowledge Hub)
Social security: Does social position influence flight initiation distance?
Social security: Does social position influence flight initiation distance?
Is flight initiation distance associated with longer-term survival in yellow-bellied marmots (<i> Marmota flaviventer </i>)?
Producer-scrounger relationships in yellow-bellied marmots
How do humans impact yellow-bellied marmots? An integrative analysis
Habituation or sensitization? Long-term responses of yellow-bellied marmots to human disturbance
Are vigilance and flight initiation distance correlated in yellow-bellied marmots?
Does locomotor ability influence flight initiation distance in yellow-bellied marmots?
Human activity affects the perception of risk by mule deer
The flush early and avoid the rush hypothesis holds after accounting for spontaneous behavior
Development of boldness and docility in yellow-bellied marmots.
Effects of spontaneous movement on alert distance and flight initiation distance in yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris)
Factors that affect the repeatability of personality in yellow-bellied marmots, <i>Marmota flaviventris</i>
Effects of Burrow Distance on Anti-predator Vigilance in Foraging Yellow-Bellied Marmots
Developing an evolutionary ecology of fear: how life history and natural history traits affect disturbance tolerance in birds
Locomotor ability and wariness in yellow-bellied marmots
References (20)
3 in Knowledge Hub, 17 external
