Crisp Rachel J, Brent Lauren J N, Carter Gerald G
Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK.
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Ancón, Panama.
R Soc Open Sci. 2021 Jul 7;8(7):210266. doi: 10.1098/rsos.210266. eCollection 2021 Jul.
When group-living animals develop individualized social relationships, they often regulate cooperation and conflict through a dominance hierarchy. Female common vampire bats have been an experimental system for studying cooperative relationships, yet surprisingly little is known about female conflict. Here, we recorded the outcomes of 1023 competitive interactions over food provided ad libitum in a captive colony of 33 vampire bats (24 adult females and their young). We found a weakly linear dominance hierarchy using three common metrics (Landau's ' measure of linearity, triangle transitivity and directional consistency). However, patterns of female dominance were less structured than in many other group-living mammals. Female social rank was not clearly predicted by body size, age, nor reproductive status, and competitive interactions were not correlated with kinship, grooming nor food sharing. We therefore found no evidence that females groomed or shared food up a hierarchy or that differences in rank explained asymmetries in grooming or food sharing. A possible explanation for such apparently egalitarian relationships among female vampire bats is the scale of competition. Female vampire bats that are frequent roostmates might not often directly compete for food in the wild.
当群居动物发展出个性化的社会关系时,它们通常会通过等级制度来调节合作与冲突。雌性普通吸血蝙蝠一直是研究合作关系的实验系统,但令人惊讶的是,人们对雌性之间的冲突知之甚少。在这里,我们记录了在一个由33只吸血蝙蝠(24只成年雌性及其幼崽)组成的圈养群体中,在随意提供食物的情况下发生的1023次食物竞争互动的结果。我们使用三种常见指标(兰道线性度测量、三角传递性和方向一致性)发现了一个弱线性等级制度。然而,雌性的优势模式不如许多其他群居哺乳动物那样结构化。雌性的社会等级并不能通过体型、年龄或生殖状态明确预测,竞争互动也与亲缘关系、梳理行为或食物分享无关。因此,我们没有发现雌性会根据等级进行梳理或分享食物的证据,也没有发现等级差异能解释梳理行为或食物分享中的不对称现象。雌性吸血蝙蝠之间这种明显平等关系的一个可能解释是竞争的规模。经常在同一栖息地栖息的雌性吸血蝙蝠在野外可能并不经常直接争夺食物。