Firth Josh A, Voelkl Bernhard, Farine Damien R, Sheldon Ben C
Edward Grey Institute, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3PS, UK.
Edward Grey Institute, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX1 3PS, UK.
Curr Biol. 2015 Dec 7;25(23):3138-43. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.09.075. Epub 2015 Nov 12.
Social relationships are fundamental to animals living in complex societies. The extent to which individuals base their decisions around their key social relationships, and the consequences this has on their behavior and broader population level processes, remains unknown. Using a novel experiment that controlled where individual wild birds (great tits, Parus major) could access food, we restricted mated pairs from being allowed to forage at the same locations. This introduced a conflict for pair members between maintaining social relationships and accessing resources. We show that individuals reduce their own access to food in order to sustain their relationships and that individual foraging activity was strongly influenced by their key social counterparts. By affecting where individuals go, social relationships determined which conspecifics they encountered and consequently shaped their other social associations. Hence, while resource distribution can determine individuals' spatial and social environment, we illustrate how key social relationships themselves can govern broader social structure. Finally, social relationships also influenced the development of social foraging strategies. In response to forgoing access to resources, maintaining pair bonds led individuals to develop a flexible "scrounging" strategy, particularly by scrounging from their pair mate. This suggests that behavioral plasticity can develop to ameliorate conflicts between social relationships and other demands. Together, these results illustrate the importance of considering social relationships for explaining behavioral variation due to their significant impact on individual behavior and demonstrate the consequences of key relationships for wider processes.
社会关系对于生活在复杂社会中的动物至关重要。个体在多大程度上围绕其关键社会关系做出决策,以及这对其行为和更广泛的种群层面过程产生何种影响,目前尚不清楚。我们通过一项新颖的实验来控制野生鸟类个体(大山雀,Parus major)获取食物的地点,限制配对的鸟儿在同一地点觅食。这给配对成员带来了在维持社会关系和获取资源之间的冲突。我们发现,个体为了维持关系会减少自身获取食物的机会,并且个体的觅食活动受到其关键社会伙伴的强烈影响。通过影响个体的去向,社会关系决定了它们会遇到哪些同种个体,从而塑造了它们的其他社会联系。因此,虽然资源分布可以决定个体的空间和社会环境,但我们阐明了关键社会关系本身如何能够支配更广泛的社会结构。最后,社会关系也影响了社会觅食策略的发展。为了放弃获取资源以维持配对关系,个体发展出一种灵活的“窃取”策略,特别是从其配偶那里窃取。这表明行为可塑性可以发展以缓解社会关系与其他需求之间的冲突。总之,这些结果说明了考虑社会关系对于解释行为变异的重要性,因为它们对个体行为有重大影响,并证明了关键关系对更广泛过程的影响。