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Predator-Elicited Visual Signal: Why The Turquoise-Browed Motmot Wag-Displays Its Racketed Tail, Troy Murphy
Predator-Elicited Visual Signal: Why The Turquoise-Browed Motmot Wag-Displays Its Racketed Tail, Troy Murphy
Troy G Murphy
Both sexes of the turquoise-browed motmot (Eumomota superciliosa) perform a wag-display in the presence of predators, whereby their long racketed tail is repeatedly rocked side-to-side in a pendulous fashion. I tested 3 hypotheses for the function of the predator-elicited wag-display: 1) pursuit-deterrent signal, 2) warning alarm signal, and 3) self-preservation alarm signal. These hypotheses were evaluated by testing whether the presence of potential receivers (kin, conspecifics, mate) modified the way in which the wag-display was performed. Data on wag-display were collected when I experimentally presented predators to motmots and when naturally occurring predators were observed at nesting colonies. The wag-display …