When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. 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 ...

  3. Phrynus longipes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrynus_longipes

    Phrynus longipes are primarily nocturnal, and are considered ambush predators. They feed mostly on small insects and other arthropods as their primary source of food, but occasionally prey upon small vertebrates such as lizards and frogs. Cave populations primarily prey on cockroaches. [1]

  4. Crepuscular animal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crepuscular_animal

    Many predators forage most intensively at night, whereas others are active at midday and see best in full sun. The crepuscular habit may both reduce predation pressure, increasing the crepuscular populations, and offer better foraging opportunities to predators that increasingly focus their attention on crepuscular prey until a new balance is ...

  5. Predation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predation

    In animals, ambush predation is characterized by the predator's scanning the environment from a concealed position until a prey is spotted, and then rapidly executing a fixed surprise attack. [ 41 ] [ 40 ] Vertebrate ambush predators include frogs, fish such as the angel shark , the northern pike and the eastern frogfish .

  6. Potoo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potoo

    Potoos are nocturnal insectivores that lack the bristles around the mouth found in the true nightjars. They hunt from a perch like a shrike or flycatcher. During the day they perch upright on tree stumps, camouflaged to look like part of the stump. The single spotted egg is laid directly on the top of a stump.

  7. Hymenopus coronatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hymenopus_coronatus

    An example of this ambush predation is the orchid mantis's ability to ambush foraging butterflies, a fairly large prey, which it captures using its pair of toothed arms and powerful bite. [4] As the female mantis continues to develop, much of its dramatic increase in size can be attributed to predatory selection and ambush predation.

  8. Mamushi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamushi

    A mamushi lurking in a bush a little above ground-level, waiting to ambush passing prey. It is typically an ambush predator that uses its excellent camouflage to hide itself in vegetation or leaf litter. It hunts and eats mainly rodents, but also small birds, lizards, and insects.

  9. Urodacus novaehollandiae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urodacus_novaehollandiae

    The scorpions are nocturnal ambush predators. They dig spiral burrows up to 1 m deep where they shelter during the day. They dig spiral burrows up to 1 m deep where they shelter during the day. They are known to live until at least 12 years old.