In one of the papers (I think it’s in the bibliography In The Chicken Challenge) the experiment used to determine the hens response to aeriel predators went something like this.
They took a single hen and placed her in an empty room. They then suspended variously shaped objects above the hen and noted the hens reaction. As reported in TCC the hen crouched and preened.
This imo is bad science. Hens don’t live by themselves in empty rooms?
What happened after the object was removed.?
Did the flying object approach the hen?
There are lots of questions that need answering before one can say the hens response to an aerial predator attack is to crouch.
All that can be stated from such an experiment is that a hen in an empty room on seeing an object above her crouched. That is completely useless information unless you keep a single hen in an empty room and fly objects above her.
It’s an easy experiment that can be controlled from which one might extrapolate that in a similar situation the hen might crouch.
A lot of bad science produces experiments and results like this.
If you want to know what a hen does when an aerial predator attacks then you need to watch an aerial predator attacking a hen in her ‘normal’ environment. This could take years of observation and the students and academics who produce papers may only spend a couple of weeks on this particular study.
I have only seen three attacks from start to finish in seven years of observing the chickens here!
I’ve seen lots of hawks attack starts and unfortunately, lots of hawk attack results, but to see the whole process is rare.
One of the problems with science confined to the rigours of academia is the pressure is always to publish papers, and for students, to get whatever level qualification they are studying for. Another problem is the student learns a whole vocabulary with sometimes strict definitions that make communicating ideas to non academic people almost pointless.
There are a few scientists who have realised this, the physicist Richard Feyman for example, who have dumped the academic jargon and found a way of communicating complex ideas in a way that is intelligible to the lay person. We need lots more of this type of scientist.
Here is a link to a site where a chicken keeper without any academic pretensions describes what he sees. You could probably learn more from reading this site than you could listening to 20 professors
.
http://www.chicken-yard.net/general/behavior.html
Rant over.
@Centrachid
In order for this to make sense you need to not think about mating opportunities and think about fear responses.
Mating can be quite a brutal and violent business if you’re a hen. In a stable group and with a mature rooster and a hen that intends to sit, the hen may crouch at the request of the rooster, or in many cases will crouch in front of the rooster inviting him to mate. It’s usually quick and if the pair are of the same breed the roosters body weight should not be that much more than the hens. Nature seems to have this fairly well sorted. With mixed breeds the situation can be quite different. The rooster can be much heavier and dimensionally larger. What this can mean is the position that the rooster should place his feet during mating doesn’t match the width of the hens shoulders and often the roosters spurs are where his feet should be. This breaks feathers and I imagine can be painful for the hen. I expect many chicken keepers have has hens with wounds in their sides from this.
If you have a group of hens without a rooster and you put a strange rooster in with this group of hens the rooster tends to charge at the nearest hen and force her to mate. The hen often crouches in this situation, not because she is interested in the rooster, but because the risk of injury in fighting the rooster off makes submission the better option.
Now consider what the hens reaction may be as the size of the rooster increases. Having a Bantam charge at a hen intent on mating with her if the hen is a fully grown Cochin for example isn’t likely to induce fear in the hen. The probability is she’ll fend the rooster off.
If the rooster is the size of the hen, then the hen may still consider the fight option.
A rooster twice the size of the hen, trying to fight the rooster off could result in the hen getting injured.
A hawk with a one metre wingspan, from the hens point of view isn’t worth trying to fight, she knows she will lose.
The question is here, does the hen know it’s a hawk.
All the studies I’ve read suggest the hen doesn’t know a hawk from a kite ,or a paper cut out in the shape of a hawk. A low flying pigeon can set off alarm calls.
Assume for the moment that the hen can’t tell a hawk from a dove in this situation. What she sees is something that could be mistaken for a rooster intent on mating with her and it’s too big to fight.
The hen crouches because this is what is likely to cause her least damage.
Next you need to bear in mind that a hen can ‘abort’ an unwanted mating. I’ve only seen this happen twice but it’s documented elsewhere so the cost to her is minimal.
There are some videos on the web of stupid people who just chuck a rooster in with a group of hens to see what happens. Have a look.