|

The Greene
Outdoors |
When
it comes to birdwatching,
just who is watching
whom? Seems those
feathered friends have
their eyes on you while
you are looking at them.
So says this study from
the
University of Bristol.
I guess
birdwatching cuts both
ways.
Are
you looking at me?
Birds
can tell if you are
watching them -- because
they are watching you
In humans, the eyes
are said to be the
‘window to the soul’,
conveying much about a
person’s emotions and
intentions. New research
demonstrates for the
first time that birds
also respond to a human’s
gaze.
Predators tend to look
at their prey when they
attack, so direct
eye-gaze can predict
imminent danger. Julia
Carter, a PhD student at
the University of
Bristol, and her
colleagues, set up
experiments that showed
starlings will keep away
from their food dish if a
human is looking at it.
However, if the person is
just as close, but their
eyes are turned away, the
birds resumed feeding
earlier and consumed more
food overall.
Carter said “This is a
great example of how
animals can pick up on
very subtle signals and
use them to their own
advantage”. Her results
are published online
today (30 April) in
Proceedings of the Royal
Society B.
Wild
starlings are highly
social and will quickly
join others at a
productive foraging
patch. This leads to
foraging situations that
are highly competitive.
An individual starling
that assesses a
relatively low predation
risk, and responds by
returning more quickly to
a foraging patch (as in
the study), will gain
valuable feeding time
before others join the
patch.
Responses to obvious
indicators of risk – a
predator looming overhead
or the fleeing of other
animals – are well
documented, but Carter
argued that a predator’s
head orientation and
eye-gaze direction are
more subtle indicators of
risk, and useful since
many predators orient
their head and eyes
towards their prey as
they attack.
This research
describes the first
explicit demonstration of
a bird responding to a
live predator’s eye-gaze
direction. Carter added:
“By responding to these
subtle eye-gaze cues,
starlings would gain a
competitive advantage
over individuals that are
not so observant. This
work highlights the
importance of considering
even very subtle signals
that might be used in an
animal’s decision-making
process.”
Do these birds
understand that a human
is looking at them, and
that they might pose some
risk? As yet, this
question has not been
answered. But whether or
not the responses involve
some sort of theory of
mind, and whether or not
they are innate or
acquired, the result is
that starlings are able
to discriminate the very
subtle eye-gaze cues of a
nearby live predator and
adjust their
anti-predator responses
in a beneficial manner.
Return to the Greene
Outdoors Index
Return to Virginia Greene
Main Page
Return to Greene Lite
Main Page |