Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)

Autotomy is an extreme escape tactic where an animal sheds an appendage to escape predation. Many species alter their behaviour postautotomy to compensate for this loss. We examined the escape behavior in the field of a semiaquatic grasshopper (Paroxyaatlantica) that could escape either by flight an...

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Main Authors: Bateman, Bill, Fleming, P.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/05/04/beheco.arr045
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/24071
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author Bateman, Bill
Fleming, P.
author_facet Bateman, Bill
Fleming, P.
author_sort Bateman, Bill
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Autotomy is an extreme escape tactic where an animal sheds an appendage to escape predation. Many species alter their behaviour postautotomy to compensate for this loss. We examined the escape behavior in the field of a semiaquatic grasshopper (Paroxyaatlantica) that could escape either by flight and landing in vegetation or flight and landing in water and swimming to safety. Wepredicted that animals missing a hind limb would be more reactive (i.e., have longer flight initiation distances; FID) and would prefer to escape to vegetation rather than to water as loss of a limb is likely to reduce swimming ability. However, our predictions were not supported. FID in autotomized animals was not different from that in intact animals. Furthermore, although autotomized grasshoppers paused more often and swam slower than intact individuals, autotomized rasshoppers more often escaped to water, reaching it via shorter flights that were lateral to the approach of the observer (intact grasshoppers more often flew directly away from the observer). We also noted differences in behavior before disturbance: Autotomised animals perched lower onemergent vegetation than did intact ones, presumably in readiness for escape via water, and also showed a greater likelihood to hide (squirreling) from the approaching observer prior to launch into flight. It seems likely that the reduced flight distance andgreater propensity to land in water for autotomized P. atlantica may reflect a failure to launch from their perch due to loss ofa jumping back leg. Key words: distance fled, escape tactics, escape trajectory, flight initiation distance, Orthoptera, predationrisk.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-240712017-02-28T01:36:15Z Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae) Bateman, Bill Fleming, P. distance fled flight initiation distance Orthoptera escape trajectory escape tactics predation risk Autotomy is an extreme escape tactic where an animal sheds an appendage to escape predation. Many species alter their behaviour postautotomy to compensate for this loss. We examined the escape behavior in the field of a semiaquatic grasshopper (Paroxyaatlantica) that could escape either by flight and landing in vegetation or flight and landing in water and swimming to safety. Wepredicted that animals missing a hind limb would be more reactive (i.e., have longer flight initiation distances; FID) and would prefer to escape to vegetation rather than to water as loss of a limb is likely to reduce swimming ability. However, our predictions were not supported. FID in autotomized animals was not different from that in intact animals. Furthermore, although autotomized grasshoppers paused more often and swam slower than intact individuals, autotomized rasshoppers more often escaped to water, reaching it via shorter flights that were lateral to the approach of the observer (intact grasshoppers more often flew directly away from the observer). We also noted differences in behavior before disturbance: Autotomised animals perched lower onemergent vegetation than did intact ones, presumably in readiness for escape via water, and also showed a greater likelihood to hide (squirreling) from the approaching observer prior to launch into flight. It seems likely that the reduced flight distance andgreater propensity to land in water for autotomized P. atlantica may reflect a failure to launch from their perch due to loss ofa jumping back leg. Key words: distance fled, escape tactics, escape trajectory, flight initiation distance, Orthoptera, predationrisk. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/24071 http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/05/04/beheco.arr045 Oxford University Press restricted
spellingShingle distance fled
flight initiation distance
Orthoptera
escape trajectory
escape tactics
predation risk
Bateman, Bill
Fleming, P.
Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)
title Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)
title_full Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)
title_fullStr Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)
title_full_unstemmed Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)
title_short Failure to launch? The influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper Paroxya atlantica (Acrididae)
title_sort failure to launch? the influence of limb autotomy on the escape behavior of a semiaquatic grasshopper paroxya atlantica (acrididae)
topic distance fled
flight initiation distance
Orthoptera
escape trajectory
escape tactics
predation risk
url http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/05/04/beheco.arr045
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/24071