Hirons-Major Chelsie, Ruberto Tommaso, Swaney William T, Reddon Adam R
School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.
R Soc Open Sci. 2024 May 29;11(5):240539. doi: 10.1098/rsos.240539. eCollection 2024 May.
For social groups to form and be stable over time, animals must develop strategies to cope with conflict among group members. Animals may behave submissively either by fleeing from an aggressor, or by signalling submission. The use of these two submissive responses may vary depending on the social and ecological context. Group size is a key aspect of social context for group living animals, as individuals in smaller groups may respond to aggression differently than those from larger groups. Here, we examine the relationship between group size and submissive behaviour in a cooperatively breeding fish, the daffodil cichlid (). We found that subordinate fish showed similar levels of submission signals in response to dominant aggression in larger and smaller groups, however, subordinates from larger groups were less likely to flee from dominant aggression than those in smaller groups. Subordinates in larger groups also showed more digging behaviour which may be also used to avoid conflict with the dominant group members. Our data show that social context affects submissive behaviour in a cooperatively breeding fish.
为了使社会群体形成并长期保持稳定,动物必须制定应对群体成员间冲突的策略。动物可能通过逃离攻击者或发出屈服信号来表现出顺从。这两种顺从反应的使用可能会因社会和生态背景而有所不同。群体规模是群居动物社会背景的一个关键方面,因为较小群体中的个体对攻击的反应可能与较大群体中的个体不同。在这里,我们研究了合作繁殖的鱼类——黄水仙丽鱼( )的群体规模与顺从行为之间的关系。我们发现,从属鱼类在大小不同的群体中对优势个体的攻击所表现出的屈服信号水平相似,然而,来自较大群体的从属个体比来自较小群体的从属个体更不容易逃离优势个体的攻击。较大群体中的从属个体还表现出更多的挖掘行为,这也可能是用于避免与优势群体成员发生冲突的。我们的数据表明,社会背景会影响合作繁殖鱼类的顺从行为。