Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Cornwall, UK.
Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2021 Jan;90(1):153-167. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13323. Epub 2020 Sep 28.
Animal groups are heterogeneous assemblages of individuals with differing fitness interests, which may lead to internal conflict over investment in group territorial defence. Differences between individuals may lead to different behavioural responses to intergroup conflict, particularly between the sexes. These potential impacts have been little studied. We used social network analysis to investigate the impact of simulated intergroup conflicts on social relationships in groups of wild banded mongooses Mungos mungo, in which intergroup fights are more costly for males than females. We predicted that social cohesion (specifically male-to-male and female-to-male grooming) would increase after conflict, and aggression would decrease, to minimize conflict between the sexes. Simulated intergroup conflicts were performed by exposing banded mongoose groups to scents, 'war cry' playbacks, and live intruders from a rival group. All grooming and aggression interactions between individuals were recorded, and grooming and aggression social networks were created for the 2 days preceding a simulated intergroup conflict (pre-conflict network) and the 2 days after (post-conflict network). We found no evidence of an increase in social cohesion after simulated conflicts, measured as grooming eigenvector centrality. Male-to-male, male-to-female and female-to-male grooming strength decreased after simulated intrusions compared to female-to-female grooming strength. However, male-female aggression decreased in intrusion trials compared to other interaction types, consistent with the hypothesis that intergroup encounters reduce the level of intragroup conflict between males and females. Males were more affected socially by intergroup encounters than females, which may be because they are investing in defence rather than internal relationships. Focusing on individual relationship changes, using social network analysis, can reveal changes in the directionality of behaviour in response to intergroup encounters, and highlight how individual responses to conflict may scale up to affect social networks and, potentially, group performance. This study highlights the importance of studying both group-level behaviours and individual relationships to more fully understand responses to intergroup encounters.
动物群体是具有不同适应利益的个体的异质集合,这可能导致在群体领土防御投资方面的内部冲突。个体之间的差异可能导致对群体间冲突的不同行为反应,特别是在性别之间。这些潜在影响尚未得到充分研究。我们使用社会网络分析来研究模拟群体间冲突对野生斑鬣狗 Mungos mungo 群体社会关系的影响,在这些群体中,雄性之间的战斗比雌性之间的战斗代价更高。我们预测,在冲突之后,社会凝聚力(特别是雄性之间和雌性之间的梳理)会增加,攻击性会降低,以最小化性别之间的冲突。通过向斑鬣狗群体暴露气味、“战吼”回放和来自敌对群体的活体入侵者来进行模拟群体间冲突。记录了个体之间的所有梳理和攻击互动,并为模拟群体间冲突前 2 天(冲突前网络)和冲突后 2 天(冲突后网络)创建了梳理和攻击社会网络。我们发现,在模拟冲突后,作为梳理特征向量中心性的衡量标准,社会凝聚力没有增加的证据。与雌性之间的梳理强度相比,雄性之间、雄性与雌性之间的梳理强度在模拟入侵后下降,而雌性与雄性之间的梳理强度下降。然而,与其他互动类型相比,雄性与雌性之间的攻击减少,这与群体间遭遇减少雄性与雌性之间的群体内冲突的假设一致。雄性比雌性更受群体间遭遇的影响,这可能是因为它们在投资于防御而不是内部关系。关注个体关系的变化,使用社会网络分析,可以揭示行为方向的变化,以响应群体间遭遇,并强调个体对冲突的反应如何扩大到影响社会网络,并可能影响群体表现。这项研究强调了研究群体行为和个体关系的重要性,以更全面地了解对群体间遭遇的反应。