Tawny owl vocal activity is constrained by predation risk
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Journal of Avian Biology © 2013 Nordic Society Oikos
Abstract
The vocal behaviour of birds may be influenced by many factors, including the risk of being detected by a predator. In
Doñana Protected Area, the tawny owl co-exists alongside its intraguild predator, the eagle owl Bubo bubo . We considered
four scenarios to study the vocal behaviour of tawny owls at dusk by analysing: A) the calling rate of all males
in 29 sites; B) the calling rate at dusk of males living within the home range of the intraguild predator; C) the calling
rate of males living within the home range of the intraguild predator between 60 and 90 min after sunset; and D) the duration of male vocal bouts in visits where eagle owls have called. In scenario A we found that only the number of conspecific males affected the calling rate of tawny owls. In scenario B we observed that the presence of an eagle owl calling constrained the calling rate of the intraguild prey. In scenario C we found that this effect seemed mostly associated to a contemporaneous detection of the intraguild predator’s calls. Finally, in scenario D we found no significant
effects on bout duration. These results seem to indicate that tawny owls use their intraguild predator’s calls as a cue to
assess predation risk, and then adjust their vocal behaviour in order to minimize predation risk by a predator that may
locate its prey by its vocalizations.
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Citation
Lourenço R, Goytre F, Delgado MM, Thornton M, Rabaça João E and Penteriani V. 2013. Tawny owl vocal activity is constrained by predation risk. Journal of Avian Biology 44: 461–468