Title of article
The Response of a Selfish Herd to an Attack from Outside the Group Perimeter
Author/Authors
VISCIDO، نويسنده , , STEVEN V. and MILLER، نويسنده , , MATTHEW and WETHEY، نويسنده , , DAVID S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
14
From page
315
To page
328
Abstract
According to the selfish herd hypothesis, animals can decrease predation risk by moving toward one another if the predator can appear anywhere and will attack the nearest target. Previous studies have shown that aggregations can form using simple movement rules designed to decrease each animalʹs Domain of Danger. However, if the predator attacks from outside the groupʹs perimeter, these simple movement rules might not lead to aggregation. To test whether simple selfish movement rules would decrease predation risk for those situations when the predator attacks from outside the flock perimeter, we constructed a computer model that allowed flocks of 75 simulated fiddler crabs to react to one another, and to a predator attacking from 7 m away. We attacked simulated crab flocks with predators of different sizes and attack speeds, and computed relative predation risk after 120 time steps. Final trajectories showed flight toward the center of the flock, but curving away from the predator. Path curvature depended on the predatorʹs size and approach speed. The average crab experienced a greater decrease in predation risk when the predator was small or slow moving. Regardless of the predatorʹs size and speed, however, predation risk always decreased as long as crabs took their flock-mates into account. We conclude that, even when flight away from an external predator occurs, the selfish avoidance of danger can lead to aggregation.
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1534633
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