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- Title
The squirrel that cried wolf: reliability detection by juvenile Richardson's ground squirrels ( Spermophilus richardsonii).
- Authors
Hare, James; Atkins, Brent
- Abstract
Where alarm signals function to warn others of the presence of threat, variation is likely to exist in the reliability of alarm signalers. Some signalers, with too low a threshold of excitation, will issue false alarms and should be ignored if potential alarm recipients are to maximize energy gains. We exposed juvenile Richardson's ground squirrels to reliable signalers, whose alarm calls were paired with the presentation of a predator model, and unreliable signalers, whose alarm calls were played when no potential predator was present. Call recipients discriminated among individual alarm callers, and reduced responsiveness to callers that had been unreliable. Thus, like primates, squirrels are capable of forming a concept of reliability by associating an individual's identity with that individual's past performance.
- Subjects
RICHARDSON'S ground squirrel; ALARM reaction; FALSE alarms; ANTIPREDATOR behavior; EXCITATION (Physiology); ANIMAL behavior
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 2001, Vol 51, Issue 1, p108
- ISSN
0340-5443
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s002650100414