Greggor Alison L, Jolles Jolle W, Thornton Alex, Clayton Nicola S
Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K.
Department of Collective Behaviour, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Konstanz, Germany.
Anim Behav. 2016 Nov;121:11-20. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.08.010.
Neophobia, or the fear of novelty, may offer benefits to animals by limiting their exposure to unknown danger, but can also impose costs by preventing the exploration of potential resources. The costs and benefits of neophobia may vary throughout the year if predation pressure, resource distribution or conspecific competition changes seasonally. Despite such variation, neophobia levels are often assumed to be temporally and individually stable. Whether or not neophobia expression changes seasonally and fluctuates equally for all individuals is crucial to understanding the drivers, consequences and plasticity of novelty avoidance. We investigated seasonal differences and individual consistency in the motivation and novelty responses of a captive group of rooks, , a seasonally breeding, colonial species of corvid that is known for being neophobic. We tested the group around novel objects and novel people to determine whether responses generalized across novelty types, and considered whether differences in dominance could influence the social risk of approaching unknown stimuli. We found that the group's level of object neophobia was stable year-round, but individuals were not consistent between seasons, despite being consistent within seasons. In contrast, the group's avoidance of novel people decreased during the breeding season, and individuals were consistent year-round. Additionally, although subordinate birds were more likely to challenge dominants during the breeding season, this social risk taking did not translate to greater novelty approach. Since seasonal variation and individual consistency varied differently towards each novelty type, responses towards novel objects and people seem to be governed by different mechanisms. Such a degree of fluctuation has consequences for other individually consistent behaviours often measured within the nonhuman personality literature.
新事物恐惧症,即对新奇事物的恐惧,可能通过限制动物接触未知危险而使其受益,但也可能因阻碍对潜在资源的探索而带来代价。如果捕食压力、资源分布或种内竞争随季节变化,那么新事物恐惧症的代价和益处可能全年都会有所不同。尽管存在这种变化,但新事物恐惧症的程度通常被认为在时间和个体上是稳定的。新事物恐惧症的表现是否会随季节变化以及所有个体的波动是否相同,对于理解新奇事物回避的驱动因素、后果和可塑性至关重要。我们调查了一群圈养的白嘴鸦(一种季节性繁殖、群居的鸦科鸟类,以具有新事物恐惧症而闻名)在动机和对新奇事物反应方面的季节性差异和个体一致性。我们围绕新奇物体和新奇人物对该群体进行了测试,以确定反应是否能推广到不同类型的新奇事物,并考虑优势地位的差异是否会影响接近未知刺激的社会风险。我们发现,该群体对物体的新事物恐惧症程度全年稳定,但个体在不同季节之间并不一致,尽管在同一季节内是一致的。相比之下,该群体在繁殖季节对新奇人物的回避减少,且个体全年保持一致。此外,尽管从属鸟类在繁殖季节更有可能挑战优势个体,但这种社会冒险行为并没有转化为对新奇事物的更多接近。由于对每种新奇事物类型的季节性变化和个体一致性的变化方式不同,对新奇物体和人物的反应似乎受不同机制支配。这种程度的波动对非人类个性文献中经常测量的其他个体一致行为有影响。