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Does sex affect both individual and collective vigilance in social mammalian herbivores: the case of the eastern grey kangaroo

机译:性会影响社会食草动物的个体和集体警惕吗:东部灰色袋鼠的情况

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In several vertebrate taxa, males and females differ in the proportions of time they individually devote to vigilance, commonly attributed to sex differences in intra-specific competition or in absolute energy requirements. However, an effect of sex on collective vigilance is less often studied (and therefore rarely predicted), despite being relevant to any consideration of the adaptiveness of mixed- vs single-sex grouping. Controlling for group size, we studied the effect of sex on vigilance in the sexually dimorphic eastern grey kangaroo Macropus giganteus, analysing vigilance at two structural levels: individual vigilance and the group's collective vigilance. Knowing that group members in this species tend to synchronise their bouts of vigilance, we tested (for the first time) whether sex affects the degree of synchrony between group members. We found that females were individually more vigilant than males and that their vigilance rate was unaffected by the presence of males. Collective vigilance did not differ between female-only and mixed-sex groups of the same size. Vigilance in mixed-sex groups was neither more nor less synchronous than in single-sex groups of females, and the presence of males seemed not to affect the degree of synchrony between females. Sixty-six percent of vigilant acts were unique (performed when no other kangaroo was alert), and only about one unique vigilant act in every three induced a collective wave of vigilance. The proportions of vigilant acts that were unique were 60% for females but only 46% for males. However, the sexes differed little in the rates at which their unique vigilant acts were copied. This limited study shows that the differences in vigilance between male and female kangaroos had no discernible effect upon collective vigilance.
机译:在一些脊椎动物类群中,雄性和雌性各自保持警惕的时间比例有所不同,这通常归因于种内竞争或绝对能量需求中的性别差异。然而,尽管对混合性与单性分组的适应性有任何考虑,但性别对集体警惕性的影响却很少研究(因此很少预测)。通过控制群体规模,我们研究了性别对两性东部灰色袋鼠Macropus giganteus的警惕性的影响,并从两个结构层面分析了警惕性:个人警惕性和群体的集体警惕性。我们知道这个物种中的群体成员倾向于保持警惕性的同步,因此我们(首次)测试了性别是否会影响群体成员之间的同步程度。我们发现女性比男性更警惕,男性的身影不会影响她们的警惕率。相同规模的仅女性和混合性别组之间的集体警惕性没有差异。与单性别女性相比,混合性别群体的警惕性既没有同步,也没有同步程度的降低。男性的出现似乎并没有影响女性之间的同步程度。 66%的警惕行为是独特的(在没有其他袋鼠保持警觉的情况下执行),并且每三个中只有大约一种独特的警惕行为引起了集体的警惕浪潮。独特的警惕行为比例是女性为60%,而男性仅为46%。但是,性别在其独特的警惕行为被复制的速率上差别不大。这项有限的研究表明,雄性和雌性袋鼠之间的警惕性差异对集体警惕性没有明显的影响。

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