Conor D. Wilson
Queen's University Belfast
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Featured researches published by Conor D. Wilson.
Animal Behaviour | 2011
Conor D. Wilson; Gareth Arnott; Neil Reid; Dai Roberts
Tagging animals is frequently employed in ecological studies to monitor individual behaviour, for example postrelease survival and dispersal of captive-bred animals used in conservation programmes. While the majority of studies focus on the efficacy of tags in facilitating the relocation and identification of individuals, few assess the direct effects of tagging in biasing animal behaviour. We used an experimental approach with a control to differentiate the effects of handling and tagging captive-bred juvenile freshwater pearl mussels, Margaritifera margaritifera, prior to release into the wild. Marking individuals with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags significantly decreased their burrowing rate and, therefore, increased the time taken to burrow into the substrate. This effect was contributed to, in part, by the detrimental impacts of handling, which also significantly affected activity, burrowing ability and the time taken for each individual to emerge and start probing the substrate. Disturbance during handling and tagging may lead to indirect mortality after release by increasing the risk of predation or dislodgement during flooding, thereby potentially compromising any conservation strategy contingent on population supplementation or reintroduction. This is the first study to demonstrate that handling and PIT tagging has a detrimental impact on invertebrate behaviour. Moreover, our results provide useful information that will inform freshwater bivalve conservation strategies.
Behavioural Processes | 2012
Conor D. Wilson; Gareth Arnott; Robert W. Elwood
Animals often show behavioural plasticity with respect to predation risk but also show behavioural syndromes in terms of consistency of responses to different stimuli. We examine these features in the freshwater pearl mussel. These bivalves often aggregate presumably to reduce predation risk to each individual. Predation risk, however, will be higher in the presence of predator cues. Here we use dimming light, vibration and touch as novel stimuli to examine the trade-off between motivation to feed and motivation to avoid predation. We present two experiments that each use three sequential novel stimuli to cause the mussels to close their valves and hence cease feeding. We find that mussels within a group showed shorter closure times than solitary mussels, consistent with decreased vulnerability to predation in group-living individuals. Mussels exposed to the odour of a predatory crayfish showed longer closures than control mussels, highlighting the predator assessment abilities of this species. However, individuals showed significant consistency in their closure responses across the trial series, in line with behavioural syndrome theory. Our results show that bivalves trade-off feeding and predator avoidance according to predation risk but the degree to which this is achieved is constrained by behavioural consistency.
Biological Conservation | 2011
Conor D. Wilson; Dai Roberts; Neil Reid
Journal of Sea Research | 2013
Björn Elsäßer; Jose M. Fariñas-Franco; Conor D. Wilson; Louise Kregting; Dai Roberts
Archive | 2011
David Roberts; Louise Allcock; Jose Farinas Franco; Emma Gorman; Christine A. Maggs; Anne Marie Mahon; David Smyth; Elisabeth Strain; Conor D. Wilson
Diversity and Distributions | 2011
Conor D. Wilson; Dai Roberts
Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2013
Neil Reid; Alan Keys; Jane S. Preston; Evelyn Moorkens; Dai Roberts; Conor D. Wilson
Animal Conservation | 2012
Conor D. Wilson; Gemma E. Beatty; Caroline Bradley; H.C. Clarke; Sarah Preston; David Roberts; Jim Provan
Irish Naturalists' Journal | 2007
Sarah Preston; Conor D. Wilson; Stuart Jennings; Jim Provan; Robbie A. McDonald
Aquatic Conservation-marine and Freshwater Ecosystems | 2012
Conor D. Wilson; S. Jane Preston; Evelyn Moorkens; Jaimie T. A. Dick; Mathieu G. Lundy