分類群を選ぶ
せきつい動物(5109件)
ほにゅう類(462件)
サルの仲間(173件)
ウマの仲間(2件)
(3933件)
はちゅう類(61件)
ヘビ(32件)
トカゲ(12件)
カメ(17件)
両生類(52件)
カエル(35件)
(554件)
サメ・エイ(4件)

節足動物(548件)
昆虫(349件)
チョウ・ガ(62件)
甲虫(51件)
アリ・ハチ(84件)
ハエの仲間(26件)
トンボ(23件)
クモ・ダニの仲間(123件)
ムカデ・ヤスデ(2件)
エビ・カニの仲間(61件)
その他の節足動物(18件)

軟体動物(66件)
二枚貝の仲間(14件)
巻貝・カサガイ(23件)
イカ・タコの仲間(20件)
カタツムリの仲間(9件)





行動の種類を選ぶ
食べる・食べられる
食べる(8件)
捕らえる(10件)
身を守る(2件)
逃げる(1件)

繁殖
つがう(2件)
誘う(7件)

社会
けんか(3件)
攻撃する(3件)

その他
移動する(6件)
その他(27件)

キーワード検索

*Supplemental Video 3. Northern cottonmouths in North Carolina engaged in food-induced male-male combat.

(18.2MB, 00:01:17)
撮影日:2020/06/23
撮影場所:North Carolina

Supplemental Video 3. Northern cottonmouths in North Carolina engaged in food-induced male-male combat.
↑click to play

Terence Farrell
2024/03/16登録

種類:Agkistrodon piscivorus
キーワード: Water mocassin snake foraging intrasexual competition



動物界 >脊索動物門 >爬虫綱 >有鱗目 >クサリヘビ科 >Agkistrodon属 >

Supplemental Video 3. Northern cottonmouths (Agkistrodon piscivorus) videoed in North Carolina engaged in food-induced male-male combat.
Time: Key Events
0.00 Snake1 consumes an anuran larva
0:06 Snake2 approaches Snake1 and rises to initiate combat
0:31 Snake1 and Snake2 engage in ritualized combat
1:12 Snake2 pauses combat to inspect a live anuran larva

Below is the abstract from the article containing this video:

Male-male combat occurs in many snake species and is often thought to result from competition for mates. We argue a more thorough assessment of the contexts in which combat occurs is warranted for snakes. We made field video observations of Agkistrodon conanti in central Florida, A. piscivorus in eastern North Carolina, and A. contortrix in eastern Kentucky. These observations were made in frequently used foraging sites; near drying ephemeral ponds in Florida and North Carolina and in a forested area with abundant emerging cicadas in Kentucky. In all three populations, males engaged in ritualized combat. In four instances, a variety of lines of evidence including season, local food resource abundance, local female abundance, and postcombat behaviors all indicated that access to food resources, rather than mating opportunities, was the catalyst for agonistic behavior. Behaviorally, food-induced combat appears nearly identical to mating-induced combat. Simplistic assumptions about the environmental contexts that induce combat may lead researchers to make inaccurate conclusions concerning the duration of the breeding season and the frequency of intraspecific competition for food in snake species. We outline a rigorous set of criteria that should be used to determine the context of male–male combat bouts. Videos showing the examples of combat discussed are available at http://www.momo-p.com/showdetail-e.php?movieid=momo231230ac01a, http:// www.momo-p.com/showdetail-e.php?movieid=momo231230ac02a, http://www.momo-p.com/showdetail-e.php?movieid= momo231228ap01a, and http://www.momo-p.com/showdetail-e.php?movieid=momo231230ap01a.

Terence M. Farrell, Henderson C. Gull, Frederick S. Boyce, and Stephen C. Richter (2024). Ritualized male–male combat resulting from intraspecific food competition in three Agkistrodon species. J. Ethol. doi.org/10.1007/s10164-024-00806-8

(データ番号:momo231228ap01a)

映像の著作権は、登録者に属します。
映像の利用については利用規約を御覧下さい。

>>English