Adaptive significance of death feigning posture as a specialized inducible defence against gape-limited predators
@article{Honma2006AdaptiveSO, title={Adaptive significance of death feigning posture as a specialized inducible defence against gape-limited predators}, author={Atsushi Honma and Shintaro Oku and Takayoshi Nishida}, journal={Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences}, year={2006}, volume={273}, pages={1631 - 1636} }
Death feigning is fairly common in a number of taxa, but the adaptive significance of this behaviour is still unclear and has seldom been tested. To date, all proposed hypotheses have assumed that prey manage to escape predation by sending a death-mimicking signal, although death-feigning postures are markedly different from those of dead animals. Moreover, the efficacy of this technique may largely depend on the foraging mode of the predator; death feigning seldom works with sit-and-wait…
99 Citations
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Interpretation of the adaptive value of death feigning in grass snakes or in other animals is hampered by lack of evidence of this behavior in the field in response to natural predators.
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- Biology, Psychology
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Why there is a difference in the strength of the stimulus needed for arousal from death feigning among Tribolium species is discussed, and whether there was a positive association between intensity of stimulus needed to rouse and the duration ofdeath feigning is determined.
Arousal from death feigning by vibrational stimuli: comparison of Tribolium species
- Biology, PsychologyJournal of Ethology
- 2020
Why there is a difference in the strength of the stimulus needed for arousal from death feigning among Tribolium species is discussed, and whether there was a positive association between intensity of stimulus needed to rouse and the duration ofdeath feigning is determined.
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- Environmental Science, BiologyBehavioural Processes
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Death-feigning behavior in Microhyla berdmorei, M. butleri, and M. heymonsi (Anura: Microhylidae) from Peninsular Malaysia
- BiologyPhyllomedusa: Journal of Herpetology
- 2020
According to Humphreys and Ruxton (2018), death feigning or tonic immobility (TI) is the innate adoption of a motionless posture by a anurans that “pretends” to be dead when it is threatened or attacked by a potential predator.
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- Biology
- 2019
It is reasoned how and under what circumstances males, if at all, are able to recognize immobile females and react to them and proposed a new term for it: ‘drop and stop’ behaviour.
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