Vaz Janice, Bartley Alana, Hunt John
School of Science, Western Sydney University, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW, 2751, Australia.
BMC Zool. 2022 Jun 2;7(1):30. doi: 10.1186/s40850-022-00126-9.
Considering animals as individuals and not as species is becoming increasingly essential to animal welfare management in captive settings. Recent studies on big cat personalities and coping strategies suggest personality can help big cats cope in their surroundings. Yet a large portion of the published literature focuses on understanding either the personality or stress physiology of big cats. Our research shows how integrating an improved understanding of the personality of big cats with stress physiology may enhance welfare, especially for endangered species like African lions. By using a wild cat personality checklist, this study compared the key personality dimensions of 22 African lions with its faecal glucocorticoids and assessed factors influencing their personality and stress physiology.
We found two reliable personality dimensions for African lions (dominance and agreeableness) and identified key factors (sex, age and location) that may influence their personality. Further, on testing if these factors influenced the stress physiology through variations in glucocorticoid levels, there was no significant difference. However, there was a strong negative association between agreeableness and glucocorticoid levels. These results suggest that the behavioural traits loading positively and higher for agreeableness are associated with lower glucocorticoid stress levels, which may assist a lion to cope with stressors in its surroundings.
Our findings highlight this integrated approach of linking personality and stress physiology of big cats can be beneficial for caretakers. For example, during stressful veterinary procedures or in reintroduction programs, recognizing the personality of lions can help in designing or providing them with resources that will alleviate stress. Thus, there is a need for more interdisciplinary approaches that will contribute towards enhancing the individual and overall welfare of big cats.
在圈养环境下的动物福利管理中,将动物视为个体而非物种变得越来越重要。最近关于大型猫科动物个性和应对策略的研究表明,个性可以帮助大型猫科动物适应周围环境。然而,大部分已发表的文献都集中在理解大型猫科动物的个性或应激生理学方面。我们的研究表明,将对大型猫科动物个性的更好理解与应激生理学相结合,可能会提高福利水平,特别是对于非洲狮等濒危物种。通过使用野生猫科动物个性清单,本研究比较了22只非洲狮的关键个性维度与其粪便中的糖皮质激素,并评估了影响它们个性和应激生理学的因素。
我们发现了非洲狮的两个可靠个性维度(支配性和宜人性),并确定了可能影响其个性的关键因素(性别、年龄和地点)。此外,在测试这些因素是否通过糖皮质激素水平的变化影响应激生理学时,没有发现显著差异。然而,宜人性与糖皮质激素水平之间存在强烈的负相关。这些结果表明,在宜人性方面正向负荷较高的行为特征与较低的糖皮质激素应激水平相关,这可能有助于狮子应对周围环境中的应激源。
我们的研究结果强调,这种将大型猫科动物的个性与应激生理学联系起来的综合方法对饲养员可能是有益的。例如,在进行有压力的兽医程序或重新引入计划时,识别狮子的个性有助于设计或提供减轻压力的资源。因此,需要更多的跨学科方法来促进提高大型猫科动物的个体和整体福利。