Flush-pursuers fake out fleeing prey.Birds that advertise their presence to potential prey may improve their chances of catching a meal, a new study reports. Most birds are stealthy stealth·y adj. stealth·i·er, stealth·i·est Marked by or acting with quiet, caution, and secrecy intended to avoid notice. See Synonyms at secret. when hunting insects, moving as little as possible to catch their would-be meals by surprise. A class of birds known as flush-pursuers, however, uses the movement of their conspicuously patterned tails and wings to elicit escape responses in nearby insects, such as flies. That deception leads to successful hunting. Now, biologist Piotr Jablonski at the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service. in Tucson has figured out how this tactic works so well. Earlier studies revealed that redstarts and other flush-pursers spread their wings and raise their tails to scare insects out of hiding. This display drums up insects to pursue. That, in itself, makes for better hunting. But Jablonski has now shown that redstarts also trick insects into moving directly into the bird's line of sight. The study appears in the May 22 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY Proceedings of the Royal Society is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society of London. Today, the Royal Society publishes two proceeding series:
To pull off their trickery Trickery See also Cunning, Deceit, Humbuggery. Bunsby, Captain Jack trapped into marriage by landlady. [Br. Lit.: Dombey and Son] Camacho cheated of bride after lavish wedding preparations. [Span. Lit. , the birds exploit a reflex of many insects. When flies sense motion, for example, they take an escape trajectory Trajectory The curve described by a body moving through space, as of a meteor through the atmosphere, a planet around the Sun, a projectile fired from a gun, or a rocket in flight. opposite to the source of motion. When pursued by a redstart redstart, common name for an Old World thrush of the genus Phoenicurus, family Turdidae. A small, slender-legged songbird, it is found in woodlands, parks, and heaths. The European redstart, P. , however, the insects are confused by the bird's pronounced, flashy tail. They flee from it and, unwittingly, toward the bird's head, becoming an easier target. Jablonski credits the success of such tactics to the "rare-enemy effect." They work because threats from unconventional predators, such as flush-pursuers, have been rare enough that the hunter's prey haven't evolved adequate escape tactics. |
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