Craving Ravens: Individual ‘haa’ Call Rates at Feeding Sites as Cues to Personality and Levels of Fission-Fusion Dynamics?
Common ravens aggregate in large non-breeder flocks for roosting and foraging until they achieve the status of territorial breeders. When discovering food, they produce far-reaching yells or ‘haa’ calls, which attract conspecifics. Due to the high levels of fission-fusion dynamics in non-breeders’ f...
Main Authors: | Georgine Szipl, Thomas Bugnyar |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Animal Behavior and Cognition
2014-08-01
|
Series: | Animal Behavior and Cognition |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.animalbehaviorandcognition.org/uploads/journals/3/04.Szipl_Bugnyar_FINAL.pdf |
Similar Items
-
Raven food calls indicate sender’s age and sex
by: Markus Boeckle, et al.
Published: (2018-03-01) -
Rapid Learning and Long-Term Memory for Dangerous Humans in Ravens (Corvus corax)
by: C. R. Blum, et al.
Published: (2020-10-01) -
DETECTABILITY AND OCCUPANCY OF THE COMMON RAVEN IN CLIFF HABITAT OF CENTRAL APPALACHIA AND SOUTHEASTERN KENTUCKY
by: Felch, Joshua Michael
Published: (2018) -
[Considerations on an alleged specimen of a Tingitan raven <em>Corvus corax tingitanus</em> Irby, 1874 from the Arrigoni degli Oddi Collection]
by: Fulvio Fraticelli, et al.
Published: (2021-04-01) -
Winter Ecology of Common Ravens in Southern Wyoming and the Effects of Raven Removal on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations
by: Peebles, Luke W.
Published: (2015)