Abstract

Perception of flockmates is clearly important if individuals' vigilance behaviour depends as much on the behaviour of other individuals as on the flock size. We attempted to evaluate the importance of flockmate perception in the scanning behaviour of free-living house sparrows Passer domesticus by observing them at an artificial feeder. Typically, sparrows would await on an adjacent wall, where they could see all the birds in the feeder, before hopping down to forage. Individuals' inter-scan time increased with flock size, but when a barrier was placed across the feeder, preventing sparrows in the feeder from seeing the other side, individuals scanned according to the number of visible sparrows, rather than the total number in the feeder. When two smaller feeders were placed at different distances apart, individuals greater than 1.2 m apart scanned independently of each other.

Keywords

PasserFlockForagingVigilance (psychology)PerceptionTime budgetBiologyZoologySparrowEcology

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
1984
Type
article
Volume
90
Issue
4
Pages
215-223
Citations
88
Access
Closed

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88
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5
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66
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Cite This

Mark A. Elgar, Paul J. Burren, Melissa Posen (1984). Vigilance and Perception of Flock Size in Foraging House Sparrows (Passer Domesticus L.). Behaviour , 90 (4) , 215-223. https://doi.org/10.1163/156853984x00146

Identifiers

DOI
10.1163/156853984x00146

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%