Life history stage effects on alert and flight initiation distances in king penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus)
Tracey Hammer, Pierre Bize, Benoit Gineste, Jean-Patrice Robin, Ren\'e Groscolas, Vincent Viblanc

TL;DR
This study investigates how life history stages, offspring independence, and breeding timing influence antipredator behaviors in king penguins, revealing that parental responses vary with reproductive investment and offspring development.
Contribution
It provides novel insights into how reproductive stage and offspring independence affect antipredator behaviors in a colonial seabird species.
Findings
Antipredator behaviors increase with reproductive investment.
Parents reduce antipredator responses once offspring are independent.
Late breeders are more likely to flee from threats.
Abstract
When approached by predators, prey must decide whether to flee or remain and fight. The economics of such decisions are underlain by the trade-off between current and residual fitness. The trade-off predicts that (i) breeders should be less prone than non-breeders to flee from approaching predators, as breeders can lose their investment into current reproduction; (ii) among breeders, parents should increasingly defend their offspring with increasing investment into the brood (brood value hypothesis), at least until the offspring can independently take part in anti-predator defenses; and (iii) for a similar investment into reproduction, breeders with lower perspectives to fledge or wean their young should invest less into offspring defense. We tested these predictions in a colonially breeding seabird, the king penguin (Aptenodytes patagonicus). Specifically, we considered how…
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