Ambush predators or sit-and-wait predators are carnivorous animals that capture or trap prey by stealth or by strategy (typically not conscious), rather than by speed or by strength. Ambush predators sit and wait for prey, often from a concealed position, and then launch a rapid surprise attack.
The ambush may be set by hiding in a burrow, by camouflage, by aggressive mimicry, or by the use of a trap. The predator then uses a combination of senses to assess the prey and to time the strike. Nocturnal ambush predators such as cats and snakes have vertical slit pupils,
helping them to judge the distance to prey in dim light. Different
ambush predators use a variety of means to capture their prey, from the
long sticky tongues of chameleons to the expanding mouths of frogfishes.
Ambush predation is widely distributed in the animal kingdom, spanning some members of numerous groups such as the starfish, cephalopods, crustaceans, spiders, insects such as mantises, and vertebrates such as many snakes and fishes.
Strategy
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.
Ambush predators use many intermediate strategies. For example, when a
pursuit predator is faster than its prey over a short distance, but not
in a long chase, then either stalking or ambush becomes necessary as
part of the strategy.
Bringing the prey within range
Concealment
Ambush often relies on concealment, whether by staying out of sight or by means of camouflage.
Burrows
Ambush predators such as trapdoor spiders on land and mantis shrimps
in the sea rely on concealment, constructing and hiding in burrows.
These provide effective concealment at the price of a restricted field
of vision.
Trapdoor spiders excavate a burrow and seal the entrance with a
web trapdoor hinged on one side with silk. The best-known is the thick,
bevelled "cork" type, which neatly fits the burrow's opening. The other
is the "wafer" type; it is a basic sheet of silk and earth. The door's
upper side is often effectively camouflaged with local materials such as
pebbles and sticks. The spider spins silk fishing lines, or trip wires,
that radiate out of the burrow entrance. When the spider is using the
trap to capture prey, its chelicerae
(protruding mouthparts) hold the door shut on the end furthest from the
hinge. Prey make the silk vibrate, and alert the spider to open the
door and ambush the prey.
Camouflage
Many ambush predators make use of camouflage so that their prey can come within striking range without detecting their presence. Among insects, coloration in ambush bugs closely matches the flower heads where they wait for prey. Among fishes, the warteye stargazer buries itself nearly completely in the sand and waits for prey. The devil scorpionfish
typically lies partially buried on the sea floor or on a coral head
during the day, covering itself with sand and other debris to further
camouflage itself. The tasselled wobbegong is a shark whose adaptations as an ambush predator include a strongly flattened and camouflaged body with a fringe that breaks up its outline.
Aggressive mimicry
Many ambush predators actively attract their prey towards them before ambushing them. This strategy is called aggressive mimicry, using the false promise of nourishment to lure prey. The alligator snapping turtle is a well-camouflaged ambush predator. Its tongue bears a conspicuous pink extension that resembles a worm and can be wriggled around; fish that try to eat the "worm" are themselves eaten by the turtle. Similarly, some reptiles such as Elaphe rat snakes employ caudal luring (tail luring) to entice small vertebrates into striking range.
The zone-tailed hawk, which resembles the turkey vulture, flies among flocks of turkey vultures, then suddenly breaks from the formation and ambushes one of them as its prey. There is however some controversy about whether this is a true case of wolf in sheep's clothing mimicry.
Flower mantises are aggressive mimics, resembling flowers convincingly enough to attract prey that come to collect pollen and nectar. The orchid mantis actually attracts its prey, pollinator insects, more effectively than flowers do. Crab spiders, similarly, are coloured like the flowers they habitually rest on, but again, they can lure their prey even away from flowers.
Traps
Some ambush predators build traps to help capture their prey. Lacewings are a flying insect in the order Neuroptera. In some species, their larval form, known as the antlion,
is an ambush predator. Eggs are laid in the earth, often in caves or
under a rocky ledge. The juvenile creates a small, crater shaped trap.
The antlion hides under a light cover of sand or earth. When an ant,
beetle or other prey slides into the trap, the antlion grabs the prey
with its powerful jaws.
Some but not all web-spinning spiders are sit-and-wait ambush predators. The sheetweb spiders (Linyphiidae)
tend to stay with their webs for long periods and so resemble
sit-and-wait predators, whereas the orb-weaving spiders (such as the Araneidae) tend to move frequently from one patch to another (and thus resemble active foragers).
Detection and assessment
Ambush predators must time their strike carefully. They need to
detect the prey, assess it as worth attacking, and strike when it is in
exactly the right place. They have evolved a variety of adaptations that
facilitate this assessment. For example, pit vipers
prey on small birds, choosing targets of the right size for their mouth
gape: larger snakes choose larger prey. They prefer to strike prey that
is both warm and moving; their pit organs between the eye and the nostril contain infrared (heat) receptors, enabling them to find and perhaps judge the size of their small, warm-blooded prey.
The deep-sea tripodfish Bathypterois grallator uses tactile and mechanosensory cues to identify food in its low-light environment. The fish faces into the current, waiting for prey to drift by.
Several species of Felidae (cats) and snakes have vertically elongated (slit) pupils, advantageous for nocturnal
ambush predators as it helps them to estimate the distance to prey in
dim light; diurnal and pursuit predators in contrast have round pupils.
Capturing the prey
Ambush predators often have adaptations for seizing their prey rapidly
and securely. The capturing movement has to be rapid to trap the prey,
given that the attack is not modifiable once launched. Zebra mantis shrimp
capture agile prey such as fish primarily at night while hidden in
burrows, striking very hard and fast, with a mean peak speed 2.30 m/s
(5.1 mph) and mean duration of 24.98 ms.
Chameleons (family Chamaeleonidae) are highly adapted as ambush predators.
They can change colour to match their surroundings and often climb
through trees with a swaying motion, probably to mimic the movement of
the leaves and branches they are surrounded by. All chameleons are primarily insectivores and feed by ballistically projecting their tongues, often twice the length of their bodies, to capture prey. The tongue is projected in as little as 0.07 seconds, and is launched at an acceleration of over 41 g. The power with which the tongue is launched, over 3000 W kg−1, is more than muscle can produce, indicating that energy is stored in an elastic tissue for sudden release.
All fishes face a basic problem when trying to swallow prey:
opening their mouth may pull food in, but closing it will push the food
out again. Frogfishes
capture their prey by suddenly opening their jaws, with a mechanism
which enlarges the volume of the mouth cavity up to 12-fold and pulls
the prey (crustaceans, molluscs
and other whole fishes) into the mouth along with water; the jaws close
without reducing the volume of the mouth cavity. The attack can be as
fast as 6 milliseconds.
Taxonomic range
Ambush predation is widely distributed across the animal kingdom. It is found in many vertebrates including fishes such as the frogfishes (anglerfishes) of the sea bottom, and the pikes of freshwater;
reptiles including crocodiles, snapping turtles, the mulga dragon, and many snakes such as the black mamba; mammals such as the cats; and birds such as the anhinga (darter). The strategy is found in several invertebrate phyla including arthropods such as mantises, purseweb spiders, and some crustaceans; cephalopod molluscs such as the colossal squid; and starfish such as Leptasterias tenera.