Martín José, Raya-García Ernesto, Ortega Jesús, López Pilar
Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, Spain.
Laboratorio de Herpetología, Instituto de Investigaciones Sobre los Recursos Naturales, Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo, Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico.
PeerJ. 2021 Feb 3;9:e10780. doi: 10.7717/peerj.10780. eCollection 2021.
Kin recognition is a phenomenon with an important function in maintaining cohesive social groups in animals. Several studies have examined parent-offspring recognition in species with direct parental care. Few studies have, however, explored parent-offspring recognition in animals that, at best, only show apparent indirect parental care, such as some reptiles. In this study, we investigated reciprocal parent-offspring recognition in the fossorial amphisbaenian , a viviparous species that shows potential stable 'family groups' in the form of parent-offspring long-term associations. We examined whether adult males and females could discriminate via chemical cues between familiar juveniles which associate with them within their family groups, and are potentially their offspring, to that of unfamiliar juveniles, and whether juveniles could discriminate between familiar adult males and females of their family group (probably their parents) and unfamiliar unrelated adults. We measured tongue flick behavior to study chemosensory responses to the scent of conspecifics. We found that adult female amphisbaenians, but not males, could discriminate between scents of familiar and unfamiliar juveniles. Juvenile amphisbaenians did not discriminate between familiar and unfamiliar adult females, but recognize familiar from unfamiliar males. We discuss our results of parent-offspring recognition according to its potential social function in an ecological fossorial context where visibility is limited and chemosensory kin recognition may contribute to the establishment of stable family groups.
亲缘识别是一种在维持动物社会群体凝聚力方面具有重要功能的现象。多项研究已考察了具有直接亲代抚育行为的物种中的亲子识别。然而,很少有研究探讨那些最多仅表现出明显间接亲代抚育行为的动物中的亲子识别,比如一些爬行动物。在本研究中,我们调查了穴居蚓蜥类动物中的相互亲子识别,这是一种胎生物种,以亲子长期关联的形式呈现出潜在稳定的“家庭群体”。我们研究了成年雄性和雌性是否能够通过化学信号区分与其在家庭群体中关联且可能是其后代的熟悉幼体的气味与不熟悉幼体的气味,以及幼体是否能够区分其家庭群体中熟悉的成年雄性和雌性(可能是其父母)与不熟悉的无亲缘关系的成年个体。我们测量了吐舌行为以研究对同种个体气味的化学感应反应。我们发现成年雌性蚓蜥能够区分熟悉和不熟悉幼体的气味,而成年雄性则不能。幼年蚓蜥无法区分熟悉和不熟悉的成年雌性,但能区分熟悉和不熟悉的成年雄性。我们根据其在生态穴居环境中的潜在社会功能来讨论我们关于亲子识别的结果,在这种环境中能见度有限,化学感应亲缘识别可能有助于建立稳定的家庭群体。