Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot SL5 7PY, UK.
Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Dec 16;379(1916):20220458. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0458. Epub 2024 Oct 28.
Humans become more selective with whom they spend their time, and as a result, the social networks of older humans are smaller than those of younger ones. In non-human animals, processes such as competition and opportunity can result in patterns of declining sociality with age. While there is support for declining sociality with age in mammals, evidence from wild bird populations is lacking. Here, we test whether sociality declines with age in a wild, insular bird population, where we know the exact ages of individuals. Using 6 years of sociality data, we find that as birds aged, their degree and betweenness decreased. The number of same-age birds still alive also decreased with age. Our results suggest that a longitudinal change in sociality with age may be, in part, an emergent effect of natural changes in demography. This highlights the need to investigate the changing costs and benefits of sociality across a lifetime.This article is part of the discussion meeting issue 'Understanding age and society using natural populations'.
人类在时间分配上变得更加有选择性,因此,老年人的社交网络比年轻人的社交网络要小。在非人类动物中,竞争和机会等过程会导致社交性随年龄增长而下降。虽然哺乳动物的社交性随年龄增长而下降的现象得到了支持,但野生鸟类种群的证据尚缺乏。在这里,我们测试了一个野生岛屿鸟类种群中社交性是否随年龄增长而下降,因为我们知道个体的准确年龄。利用 6 年的社交性数据,我们发现随着鸟类年龄的增长,它们的社交程度和中介性降低了。同龄鸟类的数量也随年龄增长而减少。我们的结果表明,社交性随年龄的纵向变化可能部分是人口统计学中自然变化的一种突现效应。这凸显了需要在整个生命周期内研究社交性的不断变化的成本和收益。本文是讨论会议“利用自然种群理解年龄和社会”的一部分。