Ruxton Graeme D
Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Division of Environmental and Evolutionary Biology, Graham Kerr Building, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Biol Lett. 2005 Jun 22;1(2):133-5. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2004.0292.
A previous experiment with birds searching for caterpillars in an aviary demonstrated a highly counterintuitive result, that the rate at which a forager encounters prey does not increase linearly with prey density. Here, I demonstrate that if search rate increases over time then this can produce exactly the observed type of behaviour. Further, I argue that declining perception of predation risk over time in the absence of reinforcement, coupled with a trade-off between anti-predator vigilance and searching ability (both widely reported in field and laboratory studies), could generate such a change in search rate over time. Hence, if my hypothesis is correct, the previous experimental results could have considerable generality, and invite reconsideration of our mathematical descriptions of predator-prey interactions.
之前在鸟舍中让鸟类寻找毛虫的一项实验展示了一个极其违反直觉的结果,即觅食者遇到猎物的速率并非随猎物密度呈线性增加。在此,我证明如果搜索速率随时间增加,那么这会恰好产生所观察到的那种行为类型。此外,我认为在没有强化的情况下随着时间推移对捕食风险的感知下降,再加上反捕食警惕性和搜索能力之间的权衡(这在野外和实验室研究中都有广泛报道),可能会随着时间产生这样一种搜索速率的变化。因此,如果我的假设正确,之前的实验结果可能具有相当的普遍性,并促使我们重新考虑对捕食者 - 猎物相互作用的数学描述。