Clark Rulon W, Dorr Scott W, Whitford Malachi D, Freymiller Grace A, Putman Breanna J
Department of Biology, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, USA.
Department of Biology, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, USA.
Zoology (Jena). 2016 Jun;119(3):196-206. doi: 10.1016/j.zool.2016.02.005. Epub 2016 Feb 28.
Predators often employ a complex series of behaviors to overcome antipredator defenses and effectively capture prey. Although hunting behaviors can improve with age and experience, many precocial species are necessarily effective predators from birth. Additionally, many predators experience innate ontogenetic shifts in predatory strategies as they grow, allowing them to adapt to prey more appropriate for their increased size and energetic needs. Understanding how the relative roles of innate age-specific adaptation and learning have evolved requires information on how predation behavior develops in situ, in free-ranging predators. However, most of the research on the ontogeny of predation behavior is based on laboratory studies of captive animals, largely due to the difficulty of following newborn individuals in nature. Here, we take advantage of the unique tracks left by juveniles of a precocial viperid, the sidewinder rattlesnake (Crotalus cerastes), which we used to follow free-ranging snakes in the field. We recorded details of their ambush hunting behavior, and compared the behaviors of these juveniles to adult snakes that we monitored in the field via radio telemetry. Although juvenile and adult behaviors were similar in most respects, we did find that adults chose more effective ambush sites, which may be due to their increased experience. We also found that juveniles (but typically not adults) perform periodic tail undulations while in ambush, and that juveniles displayed slightly different activity cycles. Both of these latter differences are likely the result of age-specific adaptations for juveniles' greater reliance on lizards versus small mammals as prey. We also compared the general predatory behavior of sidewinders to that of other species in the genus Crotalus. These findings will provide important baseline field information for more detailed empirical research on the ontogeny of predation behavior in precocial vertebrates.
捕食者通常会采用一系列复杂的行为来克服猎物的反捕食防御并有效捕获猎物。尽管狩猎行为会随着年龄和经验的增长而改善,但许多早成雏物种从出生起就必然是高效的捕食者。此外,许多捕食者在成长过程中会经历捕食策略的先天性个体发育转变,使它们能够适应更适合其不断增加的体型和能量需求的猎物。要了解先天性特定年龄适应和学习的相对作用是如何进化的,需要有关捕食行为在自由放养的捕食者自然环境中如何发展的信息。然而,大多数关于捕食行为个体发育的研究是基于圈养动物的实验室研究,这主要是因为在自然环境中追踪新生个体存在困难。在这里,我们利用一种早成雏蝰蛇——角响尾蛇(Crotalus cerastes)幼体留下的独特痕迹,在野外追踪自由活动的蛇。我们记录了它们的伏击狩猎行为细节,并将这些幼体的行为与我们通过无线电遥测在野外监测的成年蛇的行为进行了比较。尽管幼体和成年蛇的行为在大多数方面相似,但我们确实发现成年蛇选择了更有效的伏击地点,这可能是由于它们经验更丰富。我们还发现幼体(但成年蛇通常不会)在伏击时会周期性地摆动尾巴,并且幼体表现出略有不同的活动周期。后两种差异都可能是幼体特定年龄适应的结果,因为幼体相较于小型哺乳动物,更依赖蜥蜴作为猎物。我们还将角响尾蛇的一般捕食行为与响尾蛇属的其他物种进行了比较。这些发现将为更详细地实证研究早成雏脊椎动物捕食行为的个体发育提供重要的野外基础信息。