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自主行为反映了圈养亚洲象的社会压力。

Self-directed behavior reflects social stress in captive Asian elephants.

作者信息

Vilela Sofia, Chen Peini, Murakami So, Tanabe Yusuke, Yamamoto Shinya

机构信息

Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.

Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.

出版信息

Front Vet Sci. 2025 Jun 13;12:1629664. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1629664. eCollection 2025.

Abstract

Self-directed behaviors (SDBs), such as scratching, self-grooming, and body shaking, have been widely used as indicators of anxiety and social stress in non-human primates. However, research focused on SDB outside the primate range is still in infancy. Expanding this topic to other species can support animal welfare assessments and enhance comparative social studies. This study investigates whether SDB levels can reflect the social stress experienced in Asian elephants (). Using all-occurrences and focal sampling on four captive individuals, we compared post-conflict SDB levels in victims to their baseline levels. Furthermore, changes in group composition during the study allowed us to examine whether individual baseline SDBs varied with social stress, measured as victimization rates across settings. Finally, we assessed whether there was any relation between levels of SDBs and stereotypic behavior. Results showed an increase in SDB levels in the victims after aggression compared to baselines, especially for behaviors recorded as counts. An estimated 39.8% increase in expected SDB counts was associated with the post-conflict context (E = 0.335,  = 0.024). The SDBs that differed more prominently were touch mouth, head shake, dust bathing, and trunk curled inwards ( < 0.05). Regarding baselines, two individuals increased their basal SDB levels when their rates as victims were the highest, although only one reached marginal significance. An individual who was never recorded as the recipient of aggression revealed remarkably low SDB levels. This study identified specific SDBs induced by social stress in Asian elephants and suggests SDB as a potential good indicator of their wellbeing.

摘要

自我导向行为(SDBs),如抓挠、自我梳理和身体抖动,已被广泛用作非人类灵长类动物焦虑和社会压力的指标。然而,针对灵长类动物范围之外的自我导向行为的研究仍处于起步阶段。将这一主题扩展到其他物种可以支持动物福利评估,并加强比较性社会研究。本研究调查了自我导向行为水平是否能够反映亚洲象所经历的社会压力。通过对四只圈养亚洲象个体进行全事件和焦点取样,我们比较了冲突后受害者的自我导向行为水平与其基线水平。此外,研究期间群体组成的变化使我们能够检验个体的基线自我导向行为是否会随着社会压力而变化,社会压力以不同环境下的受害率来衡量。最后,我们评估了自我导向行为水平与刻板行为之间是否存在任何关联。结果显示,与基线相比,受害者在遭受攻击后的自我导向行为水平有所增加,尤其是以计数记录的行为。冲突后情境与预期的自我导向行为计数估计增加39.8%相关(E = 0.335,P = 0.024)。差异更为显著的自我导向行为包括触摸嘴巴、摇头、沙浴和象鼻向内卷曲(P < 0.05)。关于基线,有两个个体在受害率最高时其基础自我导向行为水平有所增加,尽管只有一个达到了边缘显著性。一个从未被记录为攻击对象的个体显示出极低的自我导向行为水平。本研究确定了亚洲象中由社会压力诱发的特定自我导向行为,并表明自我导向行为是其福利状况的一个潜在良好指标。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/788e/12202216/e07c4df11840/fvets-12-1629664-g001.jpg

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