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Letters to Nature
Nature 319, 143 - 145 (09 January 1986); doi:10.1038/319143a0

Birds that 'cry wolf'

Charles A. Munn

Wildlife Conservation International, New York Zoological Society, The Bronx Zoo, Bronx, New York 10460, USA

Reports of animals using alarm calls deceptively are rare (refs 1−3 and R. Cheney and D. Seyfarth, personal communication in rf. 4). Here I have studied two species of flycatching birds in Amazonia, Lanio versicolor and Thamnomanes schistogynus, which lead flocks of mixed species in the canopy and understorey of the forest, respectively, and act as sentinels, giving alarm calls at the approach of bird-eating hawks. These two species feed to a large extent on the insects flushed out by the foraging of the rest of the flock. My observations suggest that L. versicolor and T. schistogynus use the predator alarm call deceptively to distract other birds, thereby increasing their own chances of capturing arthropods. This result suggests that deception among animals may be more widespread than is generally assumed.

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References
1. Ruppell, G. Z. Tierpsychol. 26, 371−374 (1969).
2. Wilson, E. O. The Insect Societies (Harvard University Press, 1971).
3. Matsuoka, S. Tori 29, 87−90 (1980).
4. Dennett, D. The Behavioural and Brain Sciences Vol. 6, 343−355 (1983).
5. Munn, C. A. & Terborgh, J. W. Condor 81, 338−347 (1979). | ISI |
6. Munn, C. A. thesis, Princeton Univ. (1984).
7. Munn, C. A. in Neotropical Ornithology (eds Buckley, P. A., Foster, M. S., Morton, E. S., Ridgely, R. S. & Buckley, F. G.) (American Ornithological Union, Washington DC, 1985).
8. Wiley, R. H. J. Zool. 191, 127−145 (1980). | ISI |
9. Davis, R. H. Boy Scout and Other Stories for Boys (Scribner's, New York, 1917).



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