Physics Department, Haverford College, Haverford, PA 19041, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2014 Jan 15;217(Pt 2):225-34. doi: 10.1242/jeb.092403.
This study reports on experiments on falcons wearing miniature videocameras mounted on their backs or heads while pursuing flying prey. Videos of hunts by a gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus), gyrfalcon (F. rusticolus)/Saker falcon (F. cherrug) hybrids and peregrine falcons (F. peregrinus) were analyzed to determine apparent prey positions on their visual fields during pursuits. These video data were then interpreted using computer simulations of pursuit steering laws observed in insects and mammals. A comparison of the empirical and modeling data indicates that falcons use cues due to the apparent motion of prey on the falcon's visual field to track and capture flying prey via a form of motion camouflage. The falcons also were found to maintain their prey's image at visual angles consistent with using their shallow fovea. These results should prove relevant for understanding the co-evolution of pursuit and evasion, as well as the development of computer models of predation and the integration of sensory and locomotion systems in biomimetic robots.
本研究报告了在猎鹰背部或头部安装微型摄像机进行飞行猎物追逐实验的结果。通过分析一只游隼(Falco rusticolus)、游隼(F. rusticolus)/猎隼(F. cherrug)杂种和红隼(F. peregrinus)的捕猎视频,确定了它们在追逐过程中视野中猎物的明显位置。然后,使用昆虫和哺乳动物在追逐过程中观察到的转向定律的计算机模拟来解释这些视频数据。对经验数据和建模数据的比较表明,猎鹰通过猎物在猎鹰视野中的明显运动产生的线索来跟踪和捕获飞行猎物,这是一种运动伪装。还发现,猎鹰在与使用浅层中央凹一致的视角下保持猎物的图像。这些结果对于理解追逐和逃避的共同进化,以及捕食的计算机模型的开发以及仿生机器人的感觉和运动系统的集成,应该具有重要意义。