Am Nat. 2023 Apr;201(4):603-609. doi: 10.1086/723412. Epub 2023 Feb 15.
AbstractAnimals have evolved a variety of adaptations to care for their body surfaces, such as grooming behavior, which keeps the integument clean, parasite-free, and properly arranged. Despite extensive research on the grooming of mammals, birds, and arthropods, the survival value of grooming has never been directly measured in natural populations. We monitored grooming and survival in a population of marked American kestrels () on San Salvador Island, Bahamas. We found a strong association between time spent grooming and survival over a 2-year period. The quadratic relationship we show is consistent with stabilizing natural selection on grooming time. To our knowledge, this is the first evidence for a correlation between grooming time and survival in a natural population. Grooming time may predict the survival of many animal taxa, but additional studies are needed to determine the shape and strength of the relationship among birds, mammals, and arthropods.
摘要
动物进化出了多种适应行为来护理身体表面,例如梳理行为,这可以保持表皮清洁、无寄生虫并排列整齐。尽管人们对哺乳动物、鸟类和节肢动物的梳理行为进行了广泛的研究,但梳理行为的生存价值从未在自然种群中得到直接测量。我们在巴哈马的圣萨尔瓦多岛上对标记的美洲红隼()进行了梳理和生存监测。我们发现,在两年的时间里,梳理时间与生存之间存在很强的关联。我们展示的二次关系与梳理时间的稳定自然选择一致。据我们所知,这是首次在自然种群中证明梳理时间与生存之间存在相关性的证据。梳理时间可能可以预测许多动物类群的生存,但需要进一步的研究来确定鸟类、哺乳动物和节肢动物之间的关系的形状和强度。