Abstract
Fixed anti‐predator activities are costly because they limit the ability of the prey to take advantage of short term temporal patchiness in predation pressure. The ability to discriminate between hungry and satiated predators and a flexible response to the differential threat can help to lower the costs of anti‐predator behavior. In this study Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata) were found to distinguish between hungry and satiated predators. In Trinidad, populations of guppies experience different levels of predation from piscivorous fish. Individuals taken from populations with chronically high predation pressure responded stronger to the hungry predator than those from low predation sites.