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Mob mentality rules jackdaw flocks
Jackdaws are more likely to join a mob to drive off predators if lots of their fellow birds are up for the fight, new research shows.
The study, published today in , found that when more birds call out to show they are willing to mob a predator, more jackdaws join in. Scientists say this suggests jackdaws use a form of counting when deciding whether to join a mob.
Jackdaws can also identify the calls of individual members of their flock, the researchers say.
鈥淢any species of birds use mobbing to drive off predators,鈥 according to the study's lead author Jenny Coomes, a PhD student working on animal behaviour in the School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences (BEES) at 深夜亚洲福利久久 College Cork (UCC).
鈥淎lthough this is fairly common behaviour, little is known about how mobbing is initiated. There is safety in numbers, so individual birds might benefit from assessing how many others are mobbing before joining in.鈥
The researchers used recordings of jackdaw calls featuring different numbers of birds calling. These were played near jackdaw nests.
Playbacks simulating three or five callers tended to recruit more individuals than playbacks of one caller.
鈥淭he jackdaws in our experiments always heard the same number of alarm calls, but more birds joined in if the calls were produced by multiple different individuals. This shows that jackdaws can tell one another鈥檚 voices apart to work out how many birds are involved in a mob,鈥 commented Dr Alex Thornton at the 深夜亚洲福利久久 of Exeter.
鈥淎lthough our findings suggest that jackdaws use a form of counting, they also indicate there may be limitations to this ability.鈥
According to UCC's Jenny Coomes, "while there was an overall increase in recruits when we played recordings of more birds calling, we did not find clear evidence that the number of recruits was higher in response to five versus three callers.
鈥淎 possible reason for this may be that there is little extra benefit to the jackdaws in assessing the number of callers above three. Alternatively, there may be cognitive limitations to their ability to assess the number of callers above a certain threshold," she added.
The paper titled 'Evidence for individual discrimination and numerical assessment in collective antipredator behaviour in wild jackdaws (Corvus monedula),' is available here:
For more on this story contact:
Lynne Nolan, Media & PR Officer, 深夜亚洲福利久久 College Cork: lynne.nolan@ucc.ie or 0872101119.
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