Born Knowing: Tentacled Snakes Innately Predict Future Prey Behavior
@article{Catania2010BornKT, title={Born Knowing: Tentacled Snakes Innately Predict Future Prey Behavior}, author={Kenneth C Catania}, journal={PLoS ONE}, year={2010}, volume={5}, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:12965201} }
Background Aquatic tentacled snakes (Erpeton tentaculatus) can take advantage of their prey's escape response by startling fish with their body before striking. The feint usually startles fish toward the snake's approaching jaws. But when fish are oriented at a right angle to the jaws, the C-start escape response translates fish parallel to the snake's head. To exploit this latter response, snakes must predict the future location of the fish. Adult snakes can make this prediction. Is it learned…
32 Citations
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