Sharma Nitika, Anglister Nili, Spiegel Orr, Pinter-Wollman Noa
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of California Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA.
School of Zoology, Faculty of Life Sciences Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Jun 2;13(6):e10139. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10139. eCollection 2023 Jun.
Social relationships among animals emerge from interactions in multiple ecological and social situations. However, we seldom ask how each situation contributes to the global structure of a population, and whether different situations contribute different information about social relationships and the position of individuals within the social fabric. Griffon vultures () interact socially in multiple situations, including communal roosting, joint flights, and co-feeding. These social interactions can influence population-level outcomes, such as disease transmission and information sharing that determine survival and response to changes. We examined the unique contribution of each social and ecological situation to the social structure of the population and individuals' positions within the overall social network using high-resolution GPS tracking. We found that the number of individuals each vulture interacted with (degree) was best predicted by diurnal interactions-both during flights and on the ground (such as when feeding). However, the strength of social bonds, that is, the number of interactions an individual had (strength), was best predicted by interactions on the ground-both during the day (e.g., while feeding) and at night (e.g., while roosting) but not by interactions while flying. Thus, social situations differ in their impact on the relationships that individuals form. By incorporating the ecological situations in which social interactions occur we gain a more complete view of how social relationships are formed and which situations are important for different types of interactions.
动物之间的社会关系源自于多种生态和社会情境中的互动。然而,我们很少探究每种情境如何对种群的整体结构产生影响,以及不同情境是否能提供有关社会关系和个体在社会结构中位置的不同信息。兀鹫在多种情境下进行社交互动,包括群居栖息、结伴飞行和共同进食。这些社会互动会影响种群层面的结果,比如疾病传播和信息共享,而这些又决定了生存以及对变化的应对。我们使用高分辨率GPS追踪技术,研究了每种社会和生态情境对种群社会结构以及个体在整体社会网络中位置的独特贡献。我们发现,每只兀鹫与之互动的个体数量(度数),最好由日间互动来预测——包括飞行中和地面上的互动(比如进食时)。然而,社会联系的强度,即个体拥有的互动次数(强度),最好由地面上的互动来预测——包括白天(例如进食时)和夜晚(例如栖息时),而不是飞行中的互动。因此,社会情境对个体形成的关系的影响各不相同。通过纳入社会互动发生的生态情境,我们能更全面地了解社会关系是如何形成的,以及哪些情境对不同类型的互动至关重要。