Mendonça Renata S, Ringhofer Monamie, Pinto Pandora, Inoue Sota, Hirata Satoshi
Institute for Advanced Study, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Department of Life Sciences, Centre for Functional Ecology-Science for People & the Planet, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal.
Primates. 2020 Jan;61(1):49-54. doi: 10.1007/s10329-019-00728-x. Epub 2019 May 27.
In the rapidly expanding field of comparative thanatology, reports from a wide range of taxa suggest that some aspects of a concept of death may be shared by many non-human species. In horses, there are only a few anecdotal reports on behaviors toward dead conspecifics, mostly concerning domestic individuals. Here, we describe the case of a 2-month-old, free-ranging male foal that died around 12 h after being found severely injured due to a presumed wolf attack, focusing on other individuals' reactions to the dying foal. We also placed camera traps near horse carcasses to investigate reactions by other horses. Kin and non-kin of both sexes showed unusual interest in the dying foal. However, horses appeared to avoid dead conspecifics. Recording individual reactions to dead and dying conspecifics in naturalistic settings will enhance our knowledge about death-related behaviors in horses, allowing comparisons with other species that have been more thoroughly studied, to understand the evolutionary basis of these behaviors.
在迅速发展的比较死亡学领域,来自广泛分类群的报告表明,许多非人类物种可能共享死亡概念的某些方面。关于马对同种死亡个体的行为,仅有少数轶事报道,且大多涉及家养马匹。在此,我们描述了一匹2个月大的自由放养雄性马驹的案例,它在因疑似狼袭击而受重伤被发现后约12小时死亡,重点关注其他个体对垂死马驹的反应。我们还在马尸体附近放置了相机陷阱,以调查其他马匹的反应。雌雄两性的亲属和非亲属对垂死马驹都表现出不同寻常的兴趣。然而,马似乎会避开同种的尸体。在自然环境中记录个体对同种死亡和垂死个体的反应,将增进我们对马死亡相关行为的了解,从而能够与其他已得到更深入研究的物种进行比较,以理解这些行为的进化基础。