Predator-Prey Dynamics

Regular price €76.99
A01=Michael R. Conover
Agriculture's Wildlife Services
agricultures
Agriculture’s Wildlife Services
Airborne Odorants
animal scent camouflage
Artificial Nests
Author_Michael R. Conover
Baya Weaver
Category=PST
Colinus Virginianus
ecological airflow modeling
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Forest Edge
Habitat Edge
Habitat Patch
mammalian
Mammalian Predators
nest
Nest Predation
Nest Predation Rates
Nest Site Characteristics
Northern Bobwhites
odor
Odor Plume
Odor Trail
Odorant Concentration
Odorant Source
olfactory
olfactory camouflage mechanisms in wildlife
Olfactory Predators
Open Cup Nests
plumes
predation
Predation Rates
predator scent detection
predators
rates
Ring Necked Pheasant
Ruffed Grouse
turbulence impact on predation
ungulate survival strategies
Vertical Turbulence
visual
Visual Predators
wildlife behavioral adaptation
Wind Velocities

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367389291
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Sep 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Humans, being visually oriented, are well versed in camouflage and how animals hide from predators that use vision to locate prey. However, many predators do not hunt by sight; they hunt by scent. This raises the question: do survival mechanisms and behaviors exist which allow animals to hide from these olfactory predators? If so, what are they, and how do they work?
Predator-Prey Dynamics: The Role of Olfaction examines environmental as well as biological and behavioral elements of both predators and prey to answer gaps in our current knowledge of the survival dynamics of species. Beginning with a thorough look at the mechanics of olfaction, the author explains how predators detect, locate, and track their prey using odor trails on the ground or odor plumes in the air. Understanding the physics of airflow is the next step to understanding the potential for manipulating and masking scent. While a bush may conceal an animal visually from a predator, it will not protect an animal from a predator using olfaction. To hide from the latter, an animal needs to hide in locations where turbulence and updrafts will disperse its scent.
The book addresses tradeoffs that animals must make given their dual needs to hide from predators and to procure food and water. Studies of mammalian and avian behavior provide examples on the actual use and efficacy of olfactory camouflage tactics. The book concludes with a redefinition of ecological terms based on the physics of airflow and a summary of the theory and implications of olfactory predator--prey dynamics.
Introducing the mechanics of olfaction and its influence on the behavior of both predators and prey, Predator-Prey Dynamics: The Role of Olfaction presents a new perception of the world and enables us to understand and more effectively manage the delicate survival dynamics of animals in the wild.

Conover, Michael R.