I just wanted to know, if an individual of a species whose ancestors have been born in captivity, extending even over a few generations, is released back in the wild, will it be able to regain some of its natural characteristics and behaviors that have disappeared from the zoo population or are rarely exhibited?
let me use your own example-antipredator behavior
IF, say, some species of deer is born and captivity, and its ancestors, i.e. parents grandparents etc. have all lived and have been born in captivity, lets say, its ancestors for 3 or 4 generations have been born and bred in captivity, if that deer is marked for a reintroduction program and released, will it naturally again start to show antipredator behavior it had rarely/never shown in a captive situation, i.e. alertness, effectiveness in spotting possible threats etc.?
will the conditions of the wild and of mother nature naturally cause some type of antipredatory behavior by instinct, or will it have to learn by trial and error?
Also what is the effectiveness of providing certain enrichment [like keeping animals near their predators, putting stimuli from the predators exhibit into the preys and vice versa, like feces, scented wood, rocks, etc.]?