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首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Reciprocal allogrooming among unrelated Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) is affected by previously received cooperative, affiliative and aggressive behaviours
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Reciprocal allogrooming among unrelated Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) is affected by previously received cooperative, affiliative and aggressive behaviours

机译:无关的挪威大鼠(Rattus Norvegicus)之间的互惠分解受到以前获得的合作,隶属度和侵略性行为的影响

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Reciprocity can generate stable levels of cooperation among unrelated social partners. If individuals interact repeatedly, costs of altruistic acts can be compensated through an exchange of donor and receiver roles. Frequent interactions are conducive to attaining evolutionarily stable reciprocal exchange. High interaction frequencies are typical for group members maintaining close relationships among one another, which may thereby facilitate reciprocity. Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) are highly social animals that were experimentally shown to reciprocally exchange food donations and allogrooming. Here, we tested experimentally the relationship between reciprocal cooperation and other social behaviours exchanged within dyads of wild-type Norway rats. In particular, we asked whether and how interactions differing in quality (characterised by affiliative and aggressive behaviours) influence reciprocal exchanges of different social services. Our experiment involved three steps: Focal individuals experienced social partners that were either providing them with food or not, via a learnt stick-pulling task. Thereafter, they could either interact physically with these partners, or not. Subsequently, we induced allogrooming among them by applying saltwater to an inaccessible part of the body, and tested for the reciprocation of allogrooming. When individuals were allowed to interact freely, previously cooperative food providers exhibited more aggression towards focal individuals than previously uncooperative partners, which might reflect an attempt to coercively demand a return of food provisioning from focal rats. Higher frequencies of affiliative behaviours and lower frequencies of aggressive behaviours experienced during the unrestricted interaction phase tended to increase the focal rats' propensity to engage in grooming the partner in the subsequent induced allogrooming phase. This suggests that affiliative and aggressive behaviours affect the allogrooming propensity of rats. In particular, higher frequencies of received aggression decreased the propensity to reciprocate previously received cooperation. We provide experimental evidence that rats are more likely to groom partners that pulled a stick to deliver food to them. Reciprocal exchange of allogrooming depends apparently on experienced cooperation, but also on the quality of the social relationship.
机译:互惠会产生无关的社会伙伴之间的稳定合作水平。如果个人反复互动,则可以通过交换捐赠者和接收者角色来补偿利他行为的成本。频繁的相互作用有利于实现进化稳定的互惠交换。对于维持彼此之间的密切关系的组成员,高相互作用频率是典型的,从而可以促进互惠。挪威大鼠(Rattus Norvegicus)是高度社交动物,在实验上表现出相互交换的食物捐赠和异种。在这里,我们通过实验测试了互惠合作与其他社会行为与野生型挪威大鼠二元交换的关系。特别是,我们询问是否以及如何在质量(以隶属度和积极行为为特征)的互动程度影响不同社会服务的互惠交换。我们的实验涉及三个步骤:通过学习的粘拉任务,局灶性个人经历了社会伙伴,他们要么提供食物,要么提供食物。此后,他们可以与这些合作伙伴一起进行物理互动。随后,我们通过将盐水施加到身体的无法进入的部分,并对异种微发进行测试来诱导它们之间的异种。当允许个人自由互动时,先前的合作食品提供者对焦点个人的侵略比以前不合作的伙伴更具侵略,这可能反映了胁迫地要求焦点大鼠的食物供应返回。在不受限制的相互作用阶段经历的累积行为较高频率和较低频率趋于增加焦点大鼠与在随后的诱导的异种阶段进行梳理伴侣的倾向。这表明隶属于性和侵略性行为影响了大鼠的异种倾向。特别是,所接受的侵略频率较高减少了以前获得的合作的倾向倾向。我们提供实验证据,即大鼠更有可能梳理棍子的伙伴,将棍子拉到他们身上。互惠交易所的异剂显然取决于经验丰富的合作,也取决于社会关系的质量。

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