Beauchamp Guy
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Montreal, PO Box 5000, St-Hyacinthe, Quebec 72S 7C6, Canada.
Proc Biol Sci. 2004 May 22;271(1543):1039-42. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2004.2703.
Adaptive hypotheses for the evolution of flocking in birds have usually focused on predation avoidance or foraging enhancement. It still remains unclear to what extent each factor has contributed to the evolution of flocking. If predation avoidance were the sole factor involved, flocking should not be prevalent when predation is relaxed. I examined flocking tendencies along with mean and maximum flock size in species living on islands where predation risk is either absent or negligible and then compared these results with matched counterparts on the mainland. The dataset consisted of 46 pairs of species from 22 different islands across the world. The tendency to flock was retained on islands in most species, but in pairs with dissimilar flocking tendencies, island species were less likely to flock. Mean and maximum flock size were smaller on islands than on the mainland. Potential confounding factors such as population density, nest predation, habitat type, food type and body mass failed to account for the results. The results suggest that predation is a significant factor in the evolution of flocking in birds. Nevertheless, predation and other factors, such as foraging enhancement, probably act together to maintain the trait in most species.
关于鸟类集群行为进化的适应性假说通常聚焦于躲避捕食或提高觅食效率。目前尚不清楚每个因素在集群行为进化中所起作用的程度。如果躲避捕食是唯一涉及的因素,那么在捕食压力减轻时,集群行为就不应普遍存在。我研究了生活在捕食风险不存在或可忽略不计的岛屿上的物种的集群倾向以及平均和最大集群规模,然后将这些结果与大陆上的配对物种进行比较。数据集由来自全球22个不同岛屿的46对物种组成。大多数物种在岛屿上仍保留集群倾向,但在集群倾向不同的配对中,岛屿物种集群的可能性较小。岛屿上的平均和最大集群规模比大陆上的小。诸如种群密度、巢捕食、栖息地类型、食物类型和体重等潜在混杂因素无法解释这些结果。结果表明,捕食是鸟类集群行为进化中的一个重要因素。然而,捕食和其他因素,如觅食效率提高,可能共同作用以在大多数物种中维持这一特征。