Matthew J.S. Creasey’s research while affiliated with University of Exeter and other places

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Publications (1)


Plastic territoriality in group-living chestnut-crowned babblers: Roles of resource value, holding potential and predation risk
  • Article

March 2015

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119 Reads

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37 Citations

Animal Behaviour

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Matthew J.S. Creasey

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The factors selecting for territoriality and their relative importance are poorly resolved. Theoretical models predict that territoriality will be selected when resources of intermediate abundance are distributed variably and predictably in time and space, but can be selected against if the resource-holding potential of individuals is low or the risk of predation is high. Here we used a model averaging approach in a mixed modelling framework to analyse 5 years of observational and experimental data collected on group responses to actual and perceived intruders in the cooperatively breeding chestnut-crowned babbler, Pomatostomus ruficeps, in order to provide a rare test of the relative importance of resource value, resource-holding potential and predation risk in territorial behaviour. We found that babblers were highly plastic in their responses to actual and simulated intruders: on average, approaches occurred on 55% of occasions, and aggression ensued in 55% of approaches (observational and experimental results combined). Whether or not babbler groups approached, and if so were aggressive towards, actual or simulated intrusions was explained by time of day, location, group sizes, predator encounter rate and habitat characteristics, but not by reproductive status. Consideration of each of these effects regarding the three hypotheses above suggested comparable roles of group competitive advantage and predation risk on approach probability, whereas ensuing aggression was mostly explained by correlates of resource value. Our study provides compelling evidence to suggest that the risk of predation can affect the incidence of territorial and agonistic behaviour between social groups of animals by moderating the effects of resource value and group competitiveness, and might partly explain the high plasticity in group responses to intrusions.

Citations (1)


... Under this scenario, kin-directed helping can still be favoured if helpers increase the chances of engaging in extra-pair copulations for genetically related male breeders, for example, through load-lightening (Dickinson et al. 2016). However, it is not possible to rule out that helpers were gaining non-genetic benefits, such as benefits derived from philopatry or group-living (Koenig et al. 1992, Sorato et al. 2015, Shen et al. 2017, Kingma 2018, Nelson-Flower et al. 2018, Guindre-Parker & Rubenstein 2020. Over the course of the present study we were able to record a few transitions from helping to breeding status, involving four males that were banded as nestlings, helped in their first year and were later re-sighted as breeders. ...

Reference:

Family ties in a Neotropical cooperative breeder: Within‐group relatedness and fine‐scale genetic structure in the Greyish Baywing (Agelaioides badius)
Plastic territoriality in group-living chestnut-crowned babblers: Roles of resource value, holding potential and predation risk
  • Citing Article
  • March 2015

Animal Behaviour