Abstract

Aggregation can reduce an individual’s predation risk, by decreasing predator hunting efficiency or displacing predation onto others. Here, we explore how the behaviors of predator and prey influence catch success and predation risk in Swainson’s hawks Buteo swainsoni attacking swarming Brazilian free-tailed bats Tadarida brasiliensis on emergence. Lone bats including stragglers have a high relative risk of predation, representing ~5% of the catch but ~0.2% of the population. Attacks on the column were no less successful than attacks on lone bats, so hunting efficiency is not decreased by group vigilance or confusion. Instead, lone bats were attacked disproportionately often, representing ~10% of all attacks. Swarming therefore displaces the burden of predation onto bats outside the column—whether as isolated wanderers not benefitting from dilution through attack abatement, or as peripheral stragglers suffering marginal predation and possible selfish herd effects. In contrast, the hawks’ catch success depended only on the attack maneuvers that they employed, with the odds of success being more than trebled in attacks involving a high-speed stoop or rolling grab. Most attacks involved one of these two maneuvers, which therefore represent alternative rather than complementary tactics. Hence, whereas a bat’s survival depends on maintaining column formation, a hawk’s success does not depend on attacking lone bats—even though their tendency to do so is sufficient to explain the adaptive benefits of their prey’s aggregation behavior. A hawk’s success instead depends on the flight maneuvers it deploys, including the high-speed stoop that is characteristic of many raptors. Swarming bats emerging from a massive desert roost reduce their predation risk by maintaining tight column formation, because the hawks that predate them attack peripheral stragglers and isolated wanderers disproportionately. Whereas a bat’s predation risk depends on maintaining its position within the column, the catch success of a hawk depends on how it maneuvers itself to attack, and is maximized by executing a high-speed dive or rolling grab maneuver.

Highlights

  • Flocking, shoaling, and swarming behaviors can all serve to reduce an individual’s predation risk, by either 1) displacing the burden of predation onto others within or outside the group; or 2) decreasing predator hunting efficiency (Krause 1994; Rieucau et al 2015; Lehtonen and Jaatinen 2016)

  • We aimed to classify a targeted individual as a lone bat if it was either an isolated wanderer or a straggler flying on the periphery of the column, thereby including bats that were unable to benefit from dilution through attack abatement, or that were subject to marginal predation and possible selfish herd effects

  • Three-quarters of the observed hunting bouts resulted in the capture of at least one bat (75.0%; confidence interval (CI): 63.2%, 84.0%), and as the hawks invariably consumed their prey on the wing, they were often able to catch more than one bat per hunting bout

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Summary

Introduction

Flocking, shoaling, and swarming behaviors can all serve to reduce an individual’s predation risk, by either 1) displacing the burden of predation onto others within or outside the group; or 2) decreasing predator hunting efficiency (Krause 1994; Rieucau et al 2015; Lehtonen and Jaatinen 2016). The net effect is to displace the burden of predation onto lone individuals or smaller groups, in a phenomenon known as attack abatement. Individuals at the periphery have a domain of danger extending outward from the group, so are expected to suffer higher attack rates than those in the centre (Hamilton 1971). These closely related phenomena are known as selfish herding and marginal predation, respectively, and are widely observed across taxa (Duffield and Ioannou 2017; Ioannou et al 2017; Rayor and Uetz 1990); but see (Parrish 1989)

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