Are Marmot Alarm Class Condition Dependent?
Abstract
The production and structure of animal signals may be condition dependent and may provide more than one type of information to receivers. While alarm calls are not typically viewed as condition dependent, recent studies have suggested that their structure and possibly their propensity to be emitted depends on condition and state. We asked whether the propensity of yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventer) to emit calls is influenced by their immunological or parasite status, by quantifying both trap-elicited and natural calling rates as a function of their neutrophil to lymphocyte (NL) ratio, the presence of a blood borne trypanosome, and the presence of several intestinal parasites (Eimeria, Entamoeba, and Ascaris). We built linear mixed effects models to determine if the health measures we collected were associated with the probability of calling in a trap and with annual rates of wild alarm calling. Marmots infected with trypanosomes were marginally more likely to call when trapped and called naturally at Nash 2 significantly higher rates. Ascaris was negatively associated with the probability of calling when trapped. NL ratio was not directly associated with in trap calling probability, but males were more likely to call when they had higher NL ratios. Thus, internal conditions such as parasite infection and immune system activation can modulate the production of alarm signals and thus provide potential information to both predators and prey about the caller’s condition.
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References (40)
16 in Knowledge Hub, 24 external
