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1 March 2011 Toxic Prey and Predator Avoidance: Responses of Toxic Newts to Chemical Stimuli from a Predator and Injured Conspecifics
Brian G. Gall, Abigail A. Farr, Sophia G. A. Engel, Edmund D. Brodie
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Abstract

Predator avoidance behavior minimizes predation risk because the prey never enters the perceptual field of the predator. For toxic species, avoiding potential predators indiscriminately is unlikely to be the best predator avoidance strategy because many predators will be incapable of consuming the toxin. We investigated the role of chemical-based avoidance behavior in predator-prey interactions between a toxic prey species, the Rough-skinned Newt (Taricha granulosa), and its major predator, the Common Garter Snake (Thamnophis sirtalis). Terrestrial newts avoided predator kairomones only when the predator had recently consumed a conspecific, but did not avoid damage-released alarm cues. These results indicate newts may be able to chemically differentiate between toxin-resistant and toxin-sensitive snakes in the same population and avoid only those snakes actively preying upon their cohort.

Brian G. Gall, Abigail A. Farr, Sophia G. A. Engel, and Edmund D. Brodie "Toxic Prey and Predator Avoidance: Responses of Toxic Newts to Chemical Stimuli from a Predator and Injured Conspecifics," Northwestern Naturalist 92(1), 1-6, (1 March 2011). https://doi.org/10.1898/10-22.1
Received: 7 August 2010; Accepted: 1 October 2010; Published: 1 March 2011
KEYWORDS
alarm cue
antipredator
common garter snake
predator avoidance
Rough-skinned Newt
Taricha granulosa
tetrodotoxin
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