Agriculture and Food, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Armidale, New South Wales 2350, Australia.
Data61, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Marsfield, New South Wales 2122, Australia.
Biol Lett. 2023 Feb;19(2):20220396. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2022.0396. Epub 2023 Feb 8.
While it is well established that humans develop stronger relationship bonds when they share stressful experiences, there is little known on how shared stressful experiences may influence relationship bonding in animals. Here, we present a study looking at social proximity between individuals in small groups of Merino ewes following a shared stressful experience compared with control sheep that were not exposed to stress. Some sheep were familiar to each other. Analyses of social proximity using real-time-kinematic Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) on-animal devices showed sheep preferred to be closest to familiar individuals, but across the study duration they also developed a preference for the individuals they shared the stressful experience with, relative to their proximity to control individuals. These results contribute to limited research on what factors may instigate the development of bonds between unfamiliar sheep. Between-individual bonds may develop as a means of socially mediated stress buffering. Social bonding following a shared stressful experience aligns with human social relationships and increases our understanding of how animals perceive their conspecifics in relation to stressful environmental change.
虽然已经证实,当人类共同经历压力事件时,他们会建立更紧密的关系纽带,但对于共同经历的压力事件如何影响动物的关系纽带,人们知之甚少。在这里,我们介绍了一项研究,观察了在经历共同的压力事件后,与未经历压力的对照组绵羊相比,小群体美利奴羊个体之间的社会接近程度。有些绵羊彼此熟悉。使用实时运动学全球导航卫星系统(GNSS)动物装置进行的社会接近度分析表明,绵羊更喜欢靠近熟悉的个体,但在整个研究过程中,它们也表现出相对于对照组个体的偏好,更喜欢与它们共同经历压力事件的个体。这些结果有助于了解可能促使陌生绵羊之间建立联系的因素。个体间的联系可能是作为一种社会介导的压力缓冲而发展的。经历共同的压力事件后的社会联系与人的社会关系一致,增加了我们对动物如何感知与压力环境变化相关的同类的理解。