Social allies modulate corticosterone excretion and increase success in agonistic interactions in juvenile hand-raised graylag geese (Anser anser)

2003 ◽  
Vol 81 (10) ◽  
pp. 1746-1754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Didone Frigerio ◽  
Brigitte Weiss ◽  
John Dittami ◽  
Kurt Kotrschal

In mammals, support by a social partner may reduce stress levels and ease access to resources. We investigated the effects of the passive presence of a nearby social ally on excreted corticosterone immunoreactive metabolites and behaviour in juvenile graylag geese (Anser anser). Two groups of hand-raised juveniles (N1 = 9, N2 = 3) were tested over 1 year by positioning humans of different familiarity (i.e., the human foster parent, a familiar human, a nonfamiliar human, no human) at a standard distance to the focal geese. Their success in agonistic interactions significantly decreased with age and with decreasing familiarity of the accompanying human. The humans present modulated the excretion of corticosterone immunoreactive metabolites, with the strongest effects recorded after fledging when corticosterone metabolites were also positively correlated with agonistic behaviour. This suggests that a human foster parent may provide similar supportive benefits as goose parents do in natural families. We discuss the benefits of social alliances with regard to the integration into the flock, access to resources, and life history.

2009 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brigitte M. Weiß ◽  
Kurt Kotrschal ◽  
Erich Möstl ◽  
Katharina Hirschenhauser

Crustaceana ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 88 (6) ◽  
pp. 625-640 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. C. Santos ◽  
C. E. R. D. Alencar ◽  
F. A. M. Freire ◽  
A. C. Luchiari

In this study we tested the effect of population density on agonistic interactions in male Uca leptodactyla Rathbun, 1898. We recorded the crab’s behaviour in pairs or in groups of five animals composed of conspecifics and heterospecifics living in the same area (sympatric) and distinct areas (allopatric) of the mangrove forest. Allopatric conspecific crabs showed higher approaching and signalling than those in other conditions. The higher the crab density, the lower the interaction intensity between animals. Low-level agonistic signals were mainly displayed in high density (groups), while claw touch mainly occurred in pairs. Allopatric conspecifics showed the more intense agonistic interactions. Therefore, Uca seems to decrease energy investment in unnecessary fights against sympatric and conspecific crabs. Population density is a major factor driving agonistic behaviour mainly when conspecific animals are kept together. This may occur due to the increased competition for the same resources.


1979 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 683-690 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. T. Aniskowicz ◽  
J. Vaillancourt

Agonistic behaviour exhibited by free-living chipmunks (Tamias striatus) in a naturally established population at Heney Lake, Quebec, was grouped into 11 categories and combinations thereof. Agonistic behaviour patterns were described from field and laboratory observations. A scheme of interrelationships among action–reaction pairs was constructed from field data. This scheme permits one to predict the likelihood of the occurrence of possible reactions of a chipmunk to a given action performed by a conspecific.


2016 ◽  
Vol 154 (4) ◽  
pp. 732-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. SCHEFFLER ◽  
E. STAMER ◽  
I. TRAULSEN ◽  
J. KRIETER

SUMMARYThe mixing of pigs unacquainted with each other in commercial pig production is a standard procedure which leads to agonistic interactions with a wide range of individual pig behaviour. Hence, the aims of the present study were to assess the heritabilities of agonistic behaviour and to estimate correlations between three different age groups (weaned pigs n = 1111, growing pigs n = 446 and breeding gilts n = 279). The behavioural observation analysis included a period of 17 h directly after mixing as weaned pigs, growing pigs and breeding gilts (220 days of age) whereby the following agonistic traits were observed: number of fights (NF), duration of fights (DF), initiated fights (IF), received fights (RF), fights won (FW) and fights lost (FL). The behaviour of the weaned and growing pigs was significantly influenced by cross-fostering, their weight at mixing and litter attributes. Cross-fostered animals showed fewer agonistic interactions as weaned pigs and as growing pigs than non-cross-fostered animals. The influence of weight revealed that heavier pigs had a higher NF score at weaning and as growing pigs. The random litter effect explained up to 0·08 of the total variance in weaned and 0·04 in growing pigs, whereby this could partly be explained by litter size. Pigs from larger litters tended to have more agonistic interactions. The heritabilities of the recorded traits were at a low to medium level but similar between the age groups. There were high correlations between NF and all other traits in weaned pigs. The trait IF showed that the more fights a pig initiated, the more it won. This was also found for growing pigs and breeding gilts. The relationships between the age groups provided no uniform trend. The phenotypic correlations were low and the genetic correlations varied widely, partly due to the small sample size.


2010 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 380-395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josef Hemetsberger ◽  
Isabella B.R. Scheiber ◽  
Brigitte M. Weiß ◽  
Didone Frigerio ◽  
Kurt Kotrschal

Animals are hand-raised in a variety of contexts, including experimental research. This has been criticized frequently as producing animals with species-untypical behaviour. Here we compare life histories of 330 hand-raised and 631 gooseraised Greylag geese from a free-flying flock to determine whether hand-raising affected life history, reproductive variables and behaviour. We found little differences in life histories (e.g. male age, age at pair bond) or reproductive variables (e.g. number of eggs, egg weight, number of young hatched and fledged) of hand-raised and goose-raised geese. However, hand-raised females had lower life expectancies than goose-raised ones, mainly due to predation during breeding. Hand-raised geese were stressed significantly less during social, handling and predator stress, were attacked less by conspecifics and were less vigilant than goose-raised geese. We conclude that hand-raising resulted in geese with species-typical life histories but reduced stress responses. This makes hand-raised geese cooperative partners for research, but also more vulnerable when exposed to predators. Keywords: hand-raising; greylag goose; Anser anser; life-history; reproductive success; stress


Crustaceana ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
◽  

AbstractCrayfish have well developed sense organs, but clear-cut relationships with their behavioural use have hardly been established. We studied the possible use of vision, olfaction, and touch during agonistic behaviour, assuming that the outcome of agonistic interactions primarily depends on the input from one of these sensory organs. Agonistic encounters were studied in triads of crayfish, intact and with reversible blockage of vision, olfaction, or touch. Tension actions (threat, strike, fight, or avoidance) categorized as positive or negative depending on the crayfish initiating them, allowed us to identify the dominant and submissive animals. The contribution of sense organs to the outcome of interactions was tested during agonistic behaviour by blocking them (one at a time) after the establishment of a hierarchy (after-experiments) of before it (before-experiments). Under control conditions, a large number of contacts allowed animals to establish a dominance order on the first day of agonistic interactions, and the number of positive contacts between animals diminished in subsequent days. Visual or chemical blockage in after-experiments did not change the dominance order, but positive contacts decreased or increased, respectively. Blinded-before animals established a dominance order in the first 3 days of agonistic interactions showing an elevated number of positive contacts during the observation period. A similar result occurred in anosmic-before animals. Results from crayfish in which antennae were immobilized were similar to those from controls. Results suggest that at least two sensory modalities are necessary to gather information about conspecifics. Once the order is established (learned) any one of the senses is sufficient to maintain it. We speculate that if a chemical compound is involved in the maintenance of the dominance order, it is released after localization of a conspecific by vision or touch, a manoeuvre that could minimize expenditure of a costly resource.


1987 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 605 ◽  
Author(s):  
JC Petherick ◽  
JK Blackshaw

The literature describing aggressive and agonistic interactions between domestic pigs is reviewed. This is followed by a review of the effects of fighting in pigs and the environmental factors which affect levels of aggression in groups of pigs. We conclude that the mixing of unacquainted pigs should be kept to a minimum as this results in high levels of aggression, leading to physical injury and physiological changes. There have been contradictory results from mixing evenly and unevenly weighted pigs. The size of the mixed groups seems to have little effect on levels of agression; however, in the studies that have been carried out, group sizes have not been very different. Tranquillisers appear to be effective in reducing aggression, but they would be expensive to use on a regular basis. The pheromone 5a-androst- 16-en-3-one reduces aggression and acts as a growth promotant, but it has only been used experimentally. Competition for feed and space leads to increased aggression, but the provision of barriers between feeding animals and secure areas, into which pigs can escape, appear to reduce aggression. It is suggested that further work should be carried out into pen design as this seems to be a simple method of reducing aggression between animals.


1984 ◽  
Vol 62 (8) ◽  
pp. 1454-1455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian A. Fleming ◽  
Peter H. Johansen

Laboratory studies were carried out to investigate the influence of density on agonistic behaviour and dominance relations in juvenile largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides). We report here that high densities result in fewer agonistic interactions and fewer as well as less stable dominance relations. Increased numbers of potential interactions may render the continued maintenance of dominance inefficients.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phoebe Caie

<p>Spatial variation in microhabitats, predation pressure, and competitor assemblages may create a landscape of selection pressures that drives spatial variation in phenotypes. Coral reef ecosystems provide a wide range of environmental variability and therefore an excellent opportunity to quantify and explore the potential effects of fitness landscapes on phenotypes of reef fish that inhabit these ecosystems. I evaluate patterns of variation in phenotypic traits of a common coral reef fish (Thalassoma hardwicke) across a prominent environmental gradient (from offshore to inshore within a lagoon system). I quantify phenotype-environment gradients established for cohorts of fish soon after their settlement, and how these relationships change through the time to infer selection gradients (Chapter 2). Specifically, I estimate the strength of selection on a set of early life-history traits estimated from otoliths (i.e., larval growth rates and pelagic larval duration), and morphological features (i.e., body condition and fin size). </p><p><br></p> Building on the results of Chapter 2, I conduct an observational field study to estimate the behavioural consequences of spatial variation in early life history traits for young T. hardwicke (Chapter 3). I quantify feeding frequency and agonistic interactions between young T. hardwicke and intra- and interspecific competitors, and evaluate these as a function of growth history traits. Growth history traits correlate positively with the frequency and direction of agonistic interactions. Species identity (i.e., which species were interacting with young T. hardwicke) is also important for determining the frequency and direction of agonistic interactions. Additionally, the size difference between T. hardwicke and the competitor also influenced the frequency and direction of agonistic interactions. I use laboratory experiments to better understand the role of conspecifics on settlement choice of young T. hardwicke (Chapter 4). I evaluate the influence of growth histories on settlement choice in a laboratory experiment. Growth history does not significantly influence habitat choice with regards to conspecific presence for newly settled T. hardwicke. Additionally, fish that avoided habitats with conspecifics took longer to make a settlement choice, which may suggest that neophobic fish may choose habitats without conspecifics possibly to avoid competition.<div><br>I then use field experiments to evaluate the role of conspecifics on post-settlement survival of young T. hardwicke (Chapter 4), focusing on the role of conspecific size-differences and priority effects. I pair newly settled fish with larger conspecifics to evaluate the role of size-differences and priority effects on 1) frequency of agonistic interactions, and 2) post-settlement survival of newly settled T. hardwicke. I find no significant differences in either frequency of agonistic interactions or post-settlement survival.</div><div><br></div><div>The presence of phenotype-environment gradients in this system provides an excellent opportunity to test for phenotype-environment mismatches in young T. hardwicke in different environments. I set up a reciprocal transplant experiment in the field (Chapter 5) by comparing growth and survival of ‘control’ fish (i.e., fish remaining in their original environments) to that of ‘transplant’ fish (i.e., fish transplanted to a new environment). Transplant fish experience a significant reduction in survival, which suggests that phenotype-environment mismatch may be present in this system. I also found spatial differences in growth rates for treatment fish, suggesting the cost of phenotype-environment mismatches are context-dependent. Overall, the observational and experimental components of my thesis suggest that patterns of settlement and subsequent post-settlement fitness are influenced by the interface between phenotypes and environment. I find significant spatial variation in phenotypes of newly settled T. hardwicke, and post-settlement survival is also spatially variable. Additionally, disrupting the established phenotype-environment gradients alters growth patterns and increases mortality. These results highlight the importance of context-dependence in understanding patterns of settlement and survival for young reef fish and illustrate the various roles of ecological processes that shape phenotypic distributions within ecosystems.</div>


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (18) ◽  
pp. 8919-8924 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eli D. Strauss ◽  
Kay E. Holekamp

Social hierarchies are widespread in human and animal societies, and an individual’s position in its hierarchy affects both its access to resources and its fitness. Hierarchies are traditionally thought of in terms of variation in individual ability to win fights, but many are structured around arbitrary conventions like nepotistic inheritance rather than such traits as physical strength or weapon size. These convention-based societies are perplexing because position in the hierarchy appears to be gained irrespective of individual physical ability, yet social status strongly affects access to resources and fitness. It remains unclear why individuals abide by seemingly arbitrary conventions regarding social status when they stand to benefit by ignoring these conventions and competing for top positions or access to resources. Using data from wild spotted hyenas collected over 27 y and five generations, we show that individuals who repeatedly form coalitions with their top allies are likely to improve their position in the hierarchy, suggesting that social alliances facilitate revolutionary social change. Using lifetime reproductive success as a fitness measure, we go on to demonstrate that these status changes can have major fitness consequences. Finally, we show that the consequences of these changes may become even more dramatic over multiple generations, as small differences in social rank become amplified over time. This work represents a first step in reconciling the advantages of high status with the appearance of “arbitrary” conventions that structure inequality in animal and human societies.


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