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Social Predation
How Group Living Benefits Predators and Prey

The only in-depth and taxonomically inclusive resource that integrates research from both predator and prey perspectives

Guy Beauchamp (Author)

9780124072282, Elsevier Science

Paperback, published 26 February 2014

336 pages
22.9 x 15.1 x 2.2 cm, 0.68 kg

"...an extremely useful and well-written volume…I recommend it highly to anyone interested in animal behavior and/or ecology." --The Quarterly Review of Biology, Social Predation

"This is an excellent introduction to the coevolution of predator-prey relationships, with an extensive bibliography. Summing Up: Highly recommended." --CHOICE Reviews Online, Nov 2014

The classic literature on predation dealt almost exclusively with solitary predators and their prey. Going back to Lotka-Volterra and optimal foraging theory, the theory about predation, including predator-prey population dynamics, was developed for solitary species. Various consequences of sociality for predators have been considered only recently. Similarly, while it was long recognized that prey species can benefit from living in groups, research on the adaptive value of sociality for prey species mostly emerged in the 1970s. The main theme of this book is the various ways that predators and prey may benefit from living in groups. The first part focusses on predators and explores how group membership influences predation success rate, from searching to subduing prey. The second part focusses on how prey in groups can detect and escape predators. The final section explores group size and composition and how individuals respond over evolutionary times to the challenges posed by chasing or being chased by animals in groups. This book will help the reader understand current issues in social predation theory and provide a synthesis of the literature across a broad range of animal taxa.

Part A: Predators

Chapter 1: Finding and exploiting food in groups

Chapter 2: Producer-scrounger dynamics

Part B: Prey

Chapter 3: Antipredator ploys

Chapter 4: Antipredator vigilance: Theory and testing the assumptions

Chapter 5: Antipredator vigilance: Detection and the group-size effect

Chapter 6: The selfish herd

Part C: General considerations

Chapter 7: Group size and composition

Chapter 8: Mixed-species groups

Chapter 9: Evolutionary issues

Subject Areas: Animal behaviour [PSVP], Zoology & animal sciences [PSV], Animals & society [JFFZ]

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