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Habitat Selection and Prey Odor in the Foraging Behavior of Western Rattlesnakes (Crotalus viridis)
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Habitat Selection and Prey Odor in the Foraging Behavior of Western Rattlesnakes (Crotalus viridis)

著者: Demetri Hilario Theodoratus; David Chiszar
版本/格式: 文章 文章 : 英语
刊登在:Behaviour, Jan., 2000, vol. 137, no. 1, p. 119-135
数据库:JSTOR
其它数据库: ECOBritish Library Serials
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文件类型: 文章
所有的著者/提供者: Demetri Hilario Theodoratus; David Chiszar
ISSN:0005-7959
OCLC号码: 486071592
语言注释: English
注意: Fig. 1. Schematic of arena design for Experiment 1. Dashed lines denote quadrants. Each quadrant is titled and includes a graphical representation of its contents.
Fig. 3. Schematic of arena design for Experiment 2. Dashed line denotes mid-line. Rock shadows are shaded.
Fig. 4. Schematic of arena design for Experiment 3. Light-dashed line denotes mid-line Bold-dashed lines denote rodent odor trails as titled.
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摘要:

We tested the roles of prey odor and other habitat cues in the pre-strike movement patterns of two, ecologically distinct sub-species of the western rattlesnake in naturalistic arenas. In the first experiment, rattlesnakes preferred habitat containing prey odor and cover comprised of rocks, sticks and plants. While searching, rattlesnakes methodically investigated the edges and crevices within rock, areas rodents might frequent in nature. In the second experiment, rattlesnakes investigated sticks more than rocks arranged topographically similar to sticks. In the third experiment, rattlesnakes preferred habitat that included brush foliage and used chemical prey trails in pre-strike behavior via (i) trail-following, (ii) casting search patterns and (iii) scanning search patterns. Several snakes coiled in stereotyped ambush postures that allowed them to face chemical trails while resting against rocks and foliage. These results suggest that rattlesnake foraging exhibits qualities advantageous for hunting rodent prey in addition to providing protection from predators and perhaps promoting thermoregulation. Sub-species did not exhibit geographic variation in foraging behavior despite differences in natural history and morphology. Hence, the microevolutionary pattern suggests that generalized foraging repertoires are successful in numerous environments when coupled with locally specialized body patterns.

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