Behavioural compatibility, not fear, best predicts the looking patterns of chacma baboons
Animal vigilance is often investigated under a narrow set of scenarios, but this approach may overestimate its contribution to animal lives. A solution may be to sample all looking behaviours and investigate numerous competing hypotheses in a single analysis. In this study, using a wild group of hab...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Communications biology 2024-08, Vol.7 (1), p.980-15, Article 980 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Animal vigilance is often investigated under a narrow set of scenarios, but this approach may overestimate its contribution to animal lives. A solution may be to sample all looking behaviours and investigate numerous competing hypotheses in a single analysis. In this study, using a wild group of habituated chacma baboons (
Papio ursinus griseipes
) as a model system, we implemented a framework for predicting the key drivers of looking by comparing the strength of a full array of biological hypotheses. This included methods for defining individual-specific social threat environments, quantifying individual tolerance to human observers, and incorporating predator resource selection functions. Although we found evidence supporting reactionary and within-group (social) vigilance hypotheses, risk factors did not predict looking with the greatest precision, suggesting vigilance was not a major component of the animals’ behavioural patterns generally. Instead, whilst some behaviours constrain opportunities for looking, many shared compatibility with looking, alleviating the pressure to be pre-emptively vigilant for threats. Exploring looking patterns in a thorough multi-hypothesis framework should be feasible across a range of taxa, offering new insights into animal behaviour that could alter our concepts of fear ecology.
A research framework for disentangling the behavioural and risk drivers of looking suggests chacma baboons do not use vigilance pre-emptively according to landscapes of risk, instead they rely on behavioural compatibility to detect threats early. |
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ISSN: | 2399-3642 2399-3642 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s42003-024-06657-w |