Close encounters: behavioral responses of migrating songbirds to the perceived risk of predation
Claire E Nemes,
Andrea M Lindsay,
Lucas W DeGroote and
Emily B Cohen
Behavioral Ecology, 2025, vol. 36, issue 3, e01555-23
Abstract:
Migrating birds face competing pressures to travel as quickly and efficiently as possible while minimizing the risk of predation en route. Despite the potential importance, antipredator behaviors in migrating songbirds have been little studied relative to time and energy tradeoffs, even as humans have introduced novel predators including free-roaming domestic cats (Felis catus) across the globe. Birds confronted with predators during stopover can employ antipredator behaviors to reduce their immediate mortality risk, but doing so may slow refueling or impose other costs that influence migration. We captured migrating Gray Catbirds (Dumetella carolinensis) and exposed them to either a live cat, model hawk, or non-predator control in an aviary experiment to assess their behavioral responses. Birds moved lower after exposure to a model hawk but showed no significant behavioral changes in response to a cat, though we observed substantial individual variation in responses. After release, we monitored activity levels of a subset of tagged individuals via the Motus Wildlife Telemetry System. Post-release activity level did not differ between treatment and control groups, indicating that brief predator exposure did not exert a persistent effect on this behavior. The lack of overall responses to the cat may reflect birds navigating the tradeoff between antipredator behaviors, which are costly during migration, and reduction of predation risk. However, it could also indicate naïveté of young birds to this introduced predator, which may increase vulnerability to predation during migration. We encourage further investigation of the influence of prolonged or repeated exposure to domestic cats on songbird behavior and physiology, and ultimately migration success.
Keywords: migration; stopover; antipredator behavior; predation; risk; free-roaming cats; domestic cats (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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