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      A review of flight-initiation distances and their application to managing disturbance to Australian birds

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      Emu - Austral Ornithology
      CSIRO Publishing

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          Avian Nest Dispersion and Fledging Success in Field-Forest Ecotones

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            Fear in animals: a meta-analysis and review of risk assessment.

            The amount of risk animals perceive in a given circumstance (i.e. their degree of 'fear') is a difficult motivational state to study. While many studies have used flight initiation distance as a proxy for fearfulness and examined the factors influencing the decision to flee, there is no general understanding of the relative importance of these factors. By identifying factors with large effect sizes, we can determine whether anti-predator strategies reduce fear, and we gain a unique perspective on the coevolution of predator and anti-predator behaviour. Based on an extensive review and formal meta-analysis, we found that predator traits that were associated with greater risk (speed, size, directness of approach), increased prey distance to refuge and experience with predators consistently amplified the perception of risk (in terms of flight initiation distance). While fish tolerated closer approach when in larger schools, other taxa had greater flight initiation distances when in larger groups. The presence of armoured and cryptic morphologies decreased perception of risk, but body temperature in lizards had no robust effect on flight initiation distance. We find that selection generally acts on prey to be sensitive to predator behaviour, as well as on prey to modify their behaviour and morphology.
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              Developing an evolutionary ecology of fear: how life history and natural history traits affect disturbance tolerance in birds

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Emu - Austral Ornithology
                Emu - Austral Ornithology
                CSIRO Publishing
                0158-4197
                1448-5540
                December 22 2016
                December 22 2016
                : 112
                : 4
                : 269-286
                Article
                10.1071/MU12026
                abb08c31-80f4-4ed1-873a-6733c9ca8707
                © 2016
                History

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