Focardi S, Morimando F, Capriotti S, Ahmed A, Genov P
ISC-CNR, Via Madonna del Piano 10, 50019, Sesto Fiorentino, Italy.
ATC 18 Siena 2, Via Massetana Romana 34, 53100 Siena, Italy.
Behav Processes. 2015 Dec;121:80-6. doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2015.10.019. Epub 2015 Oct 30.
Wild boar is a highly polycotous ungulate species, characterized by a complex and dynamical social organization based on the maintenance of long-term bonds between mother and daughters. The roots of this social organization have to be researched at the individual level, considering adaptations that improve fitness in hostile environments. We used information collected by camera-traps at artificial feeding sites, in two contrasting environments in Bulgaria (mountain habitat) and Italy (sub-Mediterranean habitat). We recorded 417 and 885 distinct groups on 7 and 11 foraging sites in Bulgaria and Italy, respectively. We computed (controlling for time range, study area and supplementary feeding site) an index of effective foraging time of the different social groups. We observed a positive and significant effect of the number of conspecifics of the same social group on the effective foraging time. The impact of the other social classes on effective foraging time is also positive, and males, yearlings, and juveniles benefited more from the presence of other social classes, while females were less affected. The access of the different social groups to foraging sites is not random. Males and yearlings play producers (i.e., search for food) and are prone to attend foraging sites before adult females and subadults, so attaining a larger foraging efficiency with respect to a situation where other groups are already present on the feeding site. Wild boars exhibit a more complex social organisation than previously believed, where cooperation prevails largely on competition. A rough division of labour is also present: yearlings, males, and juveniles use to play producers and assume a significant amount of risk determined by the presence of predators or hunters.
野猪是一种高度多产的有蹄类动物,其特点是基于母女之间长期关系的维持而形成复杂且动态的社会组织。这种社会组织的根源必须在个体层面进行研究,考虑那些能在恶劣环境中提高适应性的特征。我们利用在保加利亚(山区栖息地)和意大利(亚地中海栖息地)两个不同环境中的人工喂食点设置的相机陷阱收集信息。我们分别在保加利亚的7个觅食点和意大利的11个觅食点记录了417个和885个不同的群体。我们计算了(控制时间范围、研究区域和补充喂食点)不同社会群体的有效觅食时间指数。我们观察到同一社会群体中同种个体数量对有效觅食时间有正向且显著的影响。其他社会阶层对有效觅食时间的影响也是正向的,雄性、一岁龄猪和幼猪从其他社会阶层的存在中受益更多,而雌性受影响较小。不同社会群体对觅食点的进入并非随机。雄性和一岁龄猪扮演生产者(即寻找食物)的角色,并且比成年雌性和亚成年猪更容易前往觅食点,因此相对于其他群体已经在喂食点的情况,它们能获得更高的觅食效率。野猪表现出比之前认为的更为复杂的社会组织,其中合作在很大程度上占主导地位,竞争次之。还存在一种粗略的劳动分工:一岁龄猪、雄性和幼猪通常扮演生产者的角色,并承担由捕食者或猎人的存在所带来的大量风险。