Moody Nicole M, Williams Cole M, Ramachandran Sohini, Fuxjager Matthew J
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America.
Center for Computational Molecular Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, United States of America.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2025 Jan 24;21(1):e1012740. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012740. eCollection 2025 Jan.
Negotiating social dynamics among allies and enemies is a complex problem that often requires individuals to tailor their behavioral approach to a specific situation based on environmental and/or social factors. One way to make these contextual adjustments is by arranging behavioral output into intentional patterns. Yet, few studies explore how behavioral patterns vary across a wide range of contexts, or how allies might interlace their behavior to produce a coordinated response. Here, we investigate the possibility that resident female and male downy woodpeckers guard their breeding territories from conspecific intruders by deploying defensive behavior in context-specific patterns. To study whether this is the case, we use correlation networks to reveal how suites of agonistic behavior are interrelated. We find that residents do organize their defense into definable patterns, with female and male social mates deploying their behaviors non-randomly in a correlated fashion. We then employ spectral clustering analyses to further distill these responses into distinct behavioral motifs. Our results show that this population of woodpeckers adjusts the defensive motifs deployed according to threat context. When we combine this approach with behavioral transition analyses, our results reveal that pair coordination is a common feature of territory defense in this species. However, if simulated intruders are less threatening, residents are more likely to defend solo, where only one bird deploys defensive behaviors. Overall, our study supports the hypothesis that nonhuman animals can pattern their behavior in a strategic and coordinated manner, while demonstrating the power of systems approaches for analyzing multiagent behavioral dynamics.
在盟友和敌人之间协调社会动态是一个复杂的问题,通常需要个体根据环境和/或社会因素,针对特定情况调整自己的行为方式。进行这些情境调整的一种方法是将行为输出安排成有意的模式。然而,很少有研究探讨行为模式在广泛的情境中如何变化,或者盟友如何交织他们的行为以产生协调的反应。在这里,我们研究了一种可能性,即雌性和雄性绒啄木鸟通过以特定情境模式部署防御行为,来保护它们的繁殖领地免受同种入侵者的侵犯。为了研究是否如此,我们使用相关网络来揭示一系列攻击性行为是如何相互关联的。我们发现,领地所有者确实将它们的防御组织成可定义的模式,雌性和雄性配偶以相关的方式非随机地部署它们的行为。然后,我们采用谱聚类分析,将这些反应进一步提炼成不同的行为基序。我们的结果表明,这群啄木鸟会根据威胁情境调整所部署的防御基序。当我们将这种方法与行为转变分析相结合时,我们的结果表明,配偶协调是该物种领地防御的一个共同特征。然而,如果模拟入侵者的威胁较小,领地所有者更有可能单独防御,即只有一只鸟部署防御行为。总体而言,我们的研究支持了这样一种假设,即非人类动物可以以一种策略性和协调性的方式安排它们的行为,同时展示了系统方法在分析多主体行为动态方面的力量。