Department of Biology, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Sep 4;14(9):e0221279. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221279. eCollection 2019.
When multiple species are vulnerable to a common set of predators, it is advantageous for individuals to recognize information about the environment provided by other species. Eastern gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) and other small mammals have been shown to exploit heterospecific alarm calls as indicators of danger. However, many species-especially birds-emit non-alarm auditory cues such as contact calls when perceived predator threat is low, and such public information may serve as cues of safety to eavesdroppers. We tested the hypothesis that eavesdropping gray squirrels respond to "bird chatter" (contact calls emitted by multiple individuals when not under threat of predation) as a measure of safety. We compared vigilance behavior of free-ranging squirrels in the presence of playbacks of bird chatter vs non-masking ambient background noise lacking chatter after priming them with a playback recording of a red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis) call. Squirrels responded to the hawk call playbacks by significantly increasing the proportion of time they spent engaged in vigilance behaviors and the number of times they looked up during otherwise non-vigilance behaviors, indicating that they perceived elevated predation threat prior to the playbacks of chatter or ambient noise. Following the hawk playback, squirrels exposed to the chatter treatment engaged in significantly lower levels of vigilance behavior (i.e., standing, freezing, fleeing, looking up) and the decay in vigilance behaviors was more rapid than in squirrels exposed to the ambient noise treatment, suggesting squirrels use information contained in bird chatter as a cue of safety. These findings suggest that eastern gray squirrels eavesdrop on non-alarm auditory cues as indicators of safety and adjust their vigilance level in accordance with the vigilance level of other species that share the same predators.
当多个物种容易受到同一组捕食者的影响时,个体识别其他物种提供的有关环境的信息是有利的。已经证明,东部灰松鼠(Sciurus carolinensis)和其他小型哺乳动物会利用同种警报叫声作为危险的指示。然而,许多物种——尤其是鸟类——在感知到捕食者威胁较低时会发出非警报声的听觉提示,例如接触叫声,而这种公共信息可能是偷听者安全的提示。我们测试了这样一个假设,即偷听的灰松鼠会将“鸟鸣声”(多个个体在没有受到捕食威胁时发出的接触叫声)作为安全的衡量标准。我们将自由放养的松鼠置于鸟鸣声回放与缺乏鸟鸣声的背景噪声(没有鸣叫的环境噪声)之间进行比较,在对它们进行红尾鹰(Buteo jamaicensis)叫声的回放录音预刺激后,观察它们的警戒行为。松鼠对鹰叫声的回放反应显著增加了它们用于警戒行为的时间比例,以及在非警戒行为期间抬头的次数,这表明它们在回放鸟鸣声或背景噪声之前就感知到了捕食威胁的增加。在鹰叫声的回放之后,暴露于鸟鸣声处理的松鼠表现出明显较低水平的警戒行为(即站立、冻结、逃离、抬头),而且警戒行为的衰减速度比暴露于背景噪声处理的松鼠更快,这表明松鼠会将鸟鸣声中的信息作为安全提示。这些发现表明,东部灰松鼠会偷听非警报声听觉提示作为安全的指示,并根据与它们共享同一捕食者的其他物种的警戒水平来调整它们的警戒水平。