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High temperatures inhibit quantity discrimination of conspecifics in a wild bird
Blackburn, Grace ; Soravia, Camilla ; Ridley, Amanda R. ; Dutour, Mylène
Blackburn, Grace
Soravia, Camilla
Ridley, Amanda R.
Dutour, Mylène
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Other Contributors
EPub Date
Publication Date
2026-03-19
Submitted Date
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Files
Accepted version
Adobe PDF, 401.6 KB
- Embargoed until 2027-03-19
Supplementary materials
Adobe PDF, 466.83 KB
- Embargoed until 2027-03-19
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Abstract
Temperatures globally are increasing, resulting in numerous behavioral consequences for wildlife. Mobbing, a collective antipredator response important for many species, is one such behavior affected by high temperatures. Recent research has shown the number of individuals involved in a mobbing event to be an important determinant of whether individuals join in, suggesting a role for numerical abilities in this behavior. However, whether temperature affects an animal's ability to discern the number of conspecifics involved in a mobbing event has not yet been investigated. Temperature-induced cognitive declines may affect the processing and decision making involved in the anti-predator response, potentially leading to maladaptive anti-predator behaviors. We presented wild great tits (Parus major) with playback of the mobbing calls of 1 or 5 conspecifics at different temperatures (from 16 to 35 °C; representing temperatures both within and outside of the thermoneutral zone [15 to 30 °C] of this species), to determine if temperature affected their mobbing response. We found a quadratic relationship between temperature and the number of mobbing calls produced by great tits, with the number of calls produced by individuals decreasing at higher temperatures, regardless of playback treatment. Importantly, while great tits showed a stronger approach response to 5 compared with 1 caller at low temperatures, they failed to do so at higher temperatures, either due to an impaired ability to discern the number of mobbing individuals, or an altered thermoregulation-predation risk trade-off at these high temperatures. Inappropriate anti-predator responses in the heat are likely to have substantial effects on survival, particularly as temperatures continue to rise.
Citation
Blackburn, G., Soravia, C., Ridley, A. R., & Dutour, M. (2026). High temperatures inhibit quantity discrimination of conspecifics in a wild bird. Behavioral Ecology, 37(3), arag030. https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/arag030
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Journal
Behavioral Ecology
Research Unit
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Type
Article
Language
en
Description
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in [Behavioral Ecology] following peer review. The version of record [Blackburn, G., Soravia, C., Ridley, A. R., & Dutour, M. (2026). High temperatures inhibit quantity discrimination of conspecifics in a wild bird. Behavioral Ecology, 37(3), arag030] is available online at: https://academic.oup.com/beheco/article-abstract/37/3/arag030/8528668?redirectedFrom=fulltext
Series/Report no.
ISSN
1045-2249
EISSN
1465-7279
