Efficiency of conditioned aversion in reducing depredation by crows
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Published source details
Dimmick C.R. & Nicolaus L.K. (1990) Efficiency of conditioned aversion in reducing depredation by crows. Journal of Applied Ecology, 27, 200-209.
Published source details Dimmick C.R. & Nicolaus L.K. (1990) Efficiency of conditioned aversion in reducing depredation by crows. Journal of Applied Ecology, 27, 200-209.
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This study is summarised as evidence for the following.
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Use aversive conditioning to reduce nest predation by avian predators Action Link |
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Use aversive conditioning to reduce nest predation by avian predators
A randomised, replicated and controlled before-and-after experiment at 21 sites in Illinois and Iowa, USA, in summer 1986 (Dimmick & Nicolaus 1990), found that predation of dyed-green chicken eggs by American crows Corvus brachyrhynchos over a 23 day period, was significantly reduced when 50% or 100% of green eggs (eight provided each day in total) were treated with Landrin (a tasteless but illness-inducing chemical). There was no corresponding reduction in consumption of green eggs at sites where they were not treated with Landrin. Sites where 12.5% of green eggs were treated had intermediate levels of predation (100% sites: 7.8 attacks/day before treatment vs. 1.2 attacks/day after provision of Landrin-treated eggs; 50% sites: 5.6 vs. 1.4; 12.5% sites: 6.0 vs. 3.4; control sites: 7.6 vs. 7.2). At 50% sites, crows also stopped predating un-dyed eggs and consumption was reduced at 12.5% and 100% sites but remained unchanged at control sites. Post-test trials (when green eggs were again distributed but did not contain Landrin) in 1986 found that crows resumed predation at 100% sites but not at 12.5% or 50% sites. Further tests in 1987 found that crows at all sites except 50% ones resumed predating green eggs.
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