Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"neophobia" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Uncertainty about predation risk: a conceptual review Crane AL; Feyten LEA; Preagola AA; Ferrari MCO; Brown GE; 37839808
BIOLOGY
2 Microhabitat conditions drive uncertainty of risk and shape neophobic responses in Trinidadian guppies, Poecilia reticulata Feyten LEA; Ramnarine IW; Brown GE; 37753307
BIOLOGY
3 Assessing effects of predator density and diversity on neophobia in Trinidadian guppies Feyten LEA; Demers EEM; Ramnarine IW; Brown GE; 35907447
BIOLOGY
4 Exploratory decisions of Trinidadian guppies when uncertain about predation risk Crane AL; Demers EE; Feyten LEA; Ramnarine IW; Brown GE; 34741669
BIOLOGY
5 Early-life and parental predation risk shape fear acquisition in adult minnows. Crane AL, Meuthen D, Thapa H, Ferrari MCO, Brown GE 33125574
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Uncertainty about predation risk: a conceptual review
Authors:Crane ALFeyten LEAPreagola AAFerrari MCOBrown GE
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37839808/
DOI:10.1111/brv.13019
Publication:Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society
Keywords:ambiguityanthropogenic changefitnessinformationmemoryneophobianoveltypredation riskreliabilityunpredictability
PMID:37839808 Category: Date Added:2023-10-16
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY

Description:

Uncertainty has long been of interest to economists and psychologists and has more recently gained attention among ecologists. In the ecological world, animals must regularly make decisions related to finding resources and avoiding threats. Here, we describe uncertainty as a perceptual phenomenon of decision-makers, and we focus specifically on the functional ecology of such uncertainty regarding predation risk. Like all uncertainty, uncertainty about predation risk reflects informational limitations. When cues are available, they may be novel (i.e. unknown information), incomplete, unreliable, overly abundant and complex, or conflicting. We review recent studies that have used these informational limitations to induce uncertainty of predation risk. These studies have typically used either over-responses to novelty (i.e. neophobia) or memory attenuation as proxies for measuring uncertainty. Because changes in the environment, particularly unpredictable changes, drive informational limitations, we describe studies assessing unpredictable variance in spatio-temporal predation risk, intensity of predation risk, predator encounter rate, and predator diversity. We also highlight anthropogenic changes within habitats that are likely to have dramatic impacts on information availability and thus uncertainty in antipredator decisions in the modern world.





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