Portugal Steven J, Ricketts Rhianna L, Chappell Jackie, White Craig R, Shepard Emily L, Biro Dora
School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, UK
School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Aug 19;372(1727). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0234.
Group living has been proposed to yield benefits that enhance fitness above the level that would be achieved through living as solitary individuals. Dominance hierarchies occur commonly in these social assemblages, and result, by definition, in resources not being evenly distributed between group members. Determinants of rank within a dominance hierarchy can be associated with morphological characteristics, previous experience of the individual, or personality traits such as exploration tendencies. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether greater exploration and positive responses to novel objects in homing pigeons () measured under laboratory conditions were associated with (i) greater initial exploration of the local area around the home loft during spontaneous exploration flights (SEF), (ii) faster and more efficient homing flights when released from further afield, and (iii) whether the traits of greater exploration and more positive responses to novel objects were more likely to be exhibited by the more dominant individuals within the group. There was no relationship between laboratory-based novel object exploration and position within the dominance hierarchy. Pigeons that were neophobic under laboratory conditions did not explore the local area during SEF opportunities. When released from sites further from home, neophobic pigeons took longer routes to home compared to those birds that had not exhibited neophobic traits under laboratory conditions, and had spontaneously explored to a greater extent. The lack of exploration in the neophobic birds is likely to have resulted in the increased costs of homing following release: unfamiliarity with the landscape likely led to the greater distances travelled and less efficient routes taken. Birds that demonstrated a lack of neophobia were not the dominant individuals inside the loft, and thus would have less access to resources such as food and potentially mates. However, a lack of neophobia makes the subordinate position possible, because subordinate birds that incur high travel costs would become calorie restricted and lose condition. Our results address emerging questions linking individual variation in behaviour with energetics and fitness consequences.This article is part of the themed issue 'Physiological determinants of social behaviour in animals'.
群居被认为能带来诸多益处,使个体的适应性高于独自生活时所能达到的水平。优势等级制度在这些社会群体中普遍存在,根据定义,这会导致资源在群体成员之间分配不均。优势等级制度中个体等级的决定因素可能与形态特征、个体以往经历或探索倾向等个性特质有关。本研究的目的是调查在实验室条件下测定的家鸽对新物体的更大探索和积极反应是否与以下因素相关:(i) 在自发探索飞行(SEF)期间对鸽舍周围局部区域的更大初始探索;(ii) 从更远的地方放飞时更快、更高效的归巢飞行;以及(iii) 群体中更具优势的个体是否更有可能表现出对新物体的更大探索和更积极反应的特质。基于实验室的新物体探索与优势等级制度中的地位之间没有关系。在实验室条件下有新物体恐惧症的鸽子在SEF期间不会探索局部区域。当从离家更远的地点放飞时,与在实验室条件下未表现出新物体恐惧症特征且自发探索程度更高的鸽子相比,有新物体恐惧症的鸽子回家的路线更长。有新物体恐惧症的鸟类缺乏探索可能导致放飞后归巢成本增加:对地形不熟悉可能导致飞行距离更远、路线效率更低。表现出没有新物体恐惧症的鸟类在鸽舍内不是优势个体,因此获得食物和潜在配偶等资源的机会较少。然而,没有新物体恐惧症使从属地位成为可能,因为旅行成本高的从属鸟类会热量受限并身体状况下降。我们的研究结果解决了将行为个体差异与能量学和适应性后果联系起来的新出现的问题。本文是主题为“动物社会行为的生理决定因素”的特刊的一部分。