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  2. Hunting success - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_success

    A chameleon successfully capturing prey with its tongue. In ecology, hunting success is the proportion of hunts initiated by a predatory organism that end in success. Hunting success is determined by a number of factors such as the features of the predator, timing, different age classes, conditions for hunting, experience, and physical capabilities.

  3. Pack hunter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pack_hunter

    A pack hunter or social predator is a predatory animal which hunts its prey by working together with other members of its species. [1] Normally animals hunting in this way are closely related, and with the exceptions of chimpanzees where only males normally hunt, all individuals in a family group contribute to hunting.

  4. Persistence hunting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persistence_hunting

    Persistence hunting, also known as endurance hunting or long-distance hunting, is a variant of pursuit predation in which a predator will bring down a prey item via indirect means, such as exhaustion, heat illness or injury.

  5. Pursuit predation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pursuit_predation

    A cheetah exhibiting pursuit predation. Pursuit predation is a form of predation in which predators actively give chase to their prey, either solitarily or as a group.It is an alternate predation strategy to ambush predation — pursuit predators rely on superior speed, endurance and/or teamwork to seize the prey, while ambush predators use concealment, luring, exploiting of surroundings and ...

  6. Predation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predation

    By hunting socially chimpanzees can catch colobus monkeys that would readily escape an individual hunter, while cooperating Harris hawks can trap rabbits. [54] [58] Wolves, social predators, cooperate to hunt and kill bison. Predators of different species sometimes cooperate to catch prey.

  7. Ambush predator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambush_predator

    Ambush predators usually remain motionless (sometimes hidden) and wait for prey to come within ambush distance before pouncing. Ambush predators are often camouflaged, and may be solitary. Pursuit predation becomes a better strategy than ambush predation when the predator is faster than the prey. [2] Ambush predators use many intermediate ...

  8. ‘Predators’ Review: David Osit’s Quietly Trenchant ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/predators-review-david...

    Those include an episode of his current predator-hunting series “Takedown,” which identified and vilified an 18-year-old highschooler for his relationship with a 15-year-old boy: a different ...

  9. Bird of prey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_of_prey

    Although the term "bird of prey" could theoretically be taken to include all birds that actively hunt and eat other animals, [4] ornithologists typically use the narrower definition followed in this page, [5] excluding many piscivorous predators such as storks, cranes, herons, gulls, skuas, penguins, and kingfishers, as well as many primarily ...