Western striped squirrel Tamiops mcclellandii: A non-avian sentinel species of bird waves
Journal article
Authors/Editors
Strategic Research Themes
No matching items found.
Publication Details
Author list: Limparungpatthanakij W., Gale G.A., Brockelman W.Y., Round P.D.
Publication year: 2017
Journal: Raffles bulletin of Zoology (0217-2445)
Volume number: 65
Start page: 474
End page: 481
Number of pages: 8
ISSN: 0217-2445
Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)
View in Web of Science | View citing articles in Web of Science
Abstract
The presence of “avian sentinels” in bird waves (mixed-species foraging flocks), which mob or alarm-call in response to predators, is widely recognised. Yet in the highly threatened lowland deciduous forests of South-east Asia, a mammal, the western striped squirrel Tamiops mcclellandii, which usually accompanied bird-waves, was a more obtrusive sentinel than any bird. It called most often in response to predators (40 out of 70 observations) and was the first species to emit alarm calls on 24 occasions (60%) where studied in Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary, western Thailand. The squirrels fed in close proximity to drongos (Dicrurus spp.), suggesting they may benefit from the drongos’ tendency to mob predators. Additionally, the drongos actively followed the bark-foraging squirrels in order to capture flushed arthropods. The presence of the western striped squirrel both helped reduce the need for vigilance among avian flock members and contributed to flock cohesion. © National University of Singapore.
Keywords
Anti-predator alarm call, Anti-predator vigilance, Mixed-species flock, Sentinel species, Squirrel