Philson Conner S, Klassen Clara, Uchida Kenta, Blumstein Daniel T
Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, P.O. Box 519, Crested Butte, CO 81224, United States.
Natural Reserve System, University of California, Santa Barbara, Lagoon Rd. Building 520, CA 93106, United States.
Behav Ecol. 2025 Jan 26;36(2):araf008. doi: 10.1093/beheco/araf008. eCollection 2025 Mar-Apr.
One of the most explored factors mediating antipredator behavior is group size, which generally predicts individuals in larger social groups allocate less time to antipredator vigilance while foraging. However, group size alone does not capture the full complexity of sociality. An individual's 'sense of security', or their perceived risk of predation, is also influenced by an individual's social connections. Further, group social structure - the pattern of all social interactions in a group - could explain additional variation in perceptions of security for the individuals that reside in the group. Using the time allocated to vigilance during foraging and flight initiation distance (FID) to quantify individuals' social security, we explored whether individual yellow-bellied marmots () in tightly connected social groups looked less while foraging and had shorter FIDs. Using linear mixed effect models, we found modest support for the Social Security Hypothesis; individuals in more socially reciprocal groups may spend less time looking for predators while foraging. No measure of group social structure explained variation in FID. Measures of the immediate environment (the number of individuals within 10 m for vigilance and the distance from burrow and alert distance for FID) had effect sizes an order of magnitude greater than measures of social structure, suggesting an individual's immediate environment has more of an impact on their antipredator behavior than the structure of their social group.
介导反捕食者行为的最受关注的因素之一是群体规模,一般而言,这表明较大社会群体中的个体在觅食时用于反捕食者警戒的时间较少。然而,仅群体规模并不能完全体现社会性的复杂性。个体的“安全感”,即其感知到的被捕食风险,也会受到个体社会关系的影响。此外,群体社会结构——群体中所有社会互动的模式——可以解释群体中个体安全感认知的额外差异。我们利用觅食时用于警戒的时间和逃跑起始距离(FID)来量化个体的社会安全感,探讨了紧密联系的社会群体中的黄腹土拨鼠个体在觅食时是否较少警戒以及FID是否更短。通过线性混合效应模型,我们对社会安全感假说获得了一定程度的支持;社会互动性更强的群体中的个体在觅食时可能花费较少时间寻找捕食者。没有任何群体社会结构指标能够解释FID的差异。直接环境指标(警戒时10米范围内的个体数量以及FID时与洞穴的距离和警戒距离)的效应大小比社会结构指标大一个数量级,这表明个体的直接环境对其反捕食者行为的影响大于其社会群体结构。