检索结果(检索关键词为:EVOLUTION;结果共37条)
  • Lazzaroni, Martina; Brogi, Rudy; Napolitano, Valentina; Apollonio, Marco; Range, Friederike; Marshall-Pescini, Sarah
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2024年第70卷第3期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoae023
    关键词: VULPES-VULPES; HUMAN DISTURBANCE; URBAN FOXES; WILDLIFE; AVAILABILITY; NEOPHOBIA; NEOPHILIA; EVOLUTION; RESPONSES; BOLDER
    摘要: Human presence and activities have profoundly altered animals' habitats, exposing them to greater risks but also providing new opportunities and resources. The animals' capacity to effectively navigate and strike a balance between risks and benefits is crucial for their survival in the Anthropocene era. Red foxes (Vulpes vulpes), adept urban dwellers, exhibit behavioral plasticity in human-altered environments. We investigated variations in detection frequency on trail cameras and the behavioral responses (explorative, bold, and fearful) of wild red foxes living along an urbanization gradient when exposed to a metal bin initially presented clean and then filled with anthropogenic food. All fox populations displayed an increased interest and similar explorative behavioral responses toward the anthropogenic food source, irrespective of the urbanization gradient. Despite no impact on explorative behaviors, foxes in more urbanized areas initially showed heightened fear toward the empty bin, indicating increased apprehension toward novel objects. However, this fear diminished over time, and in the presence of food, urban foxes displayed slightly reduced fear compared with their less urban counterparts. Our results highlight foxes' potential for adaptability to human landscapes, additionally underscoring the nuanced interplay of fear and explorative behavioral response of populations living along the urbanization gradient.

  • Macali, Armando; Ferretti, Sara; Scozzafava, Serena; Gatto, Elia; Carere, Claudio
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2024年第70卷第3期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoae028
    关键词: PERSONALITY-TRAITS; ECOLOGICAL IMPACTS; DISPERSAL BEHAVIOR; ANIMAL BEHAVIOR; BOLDNESS; POPULATIONS; EVOLUTION; LIFE; THIGMOTAXIS; PERFORMANCE
    摘要: Behavior is predicted to be a primary determinant of the success of the invasion process during the early phases of colonization. Comparing invaders with sympatric native species may provide a good approach to unravel behavioral traits involved in an invasion process. In this study, we carried out an experimental simulation of the introduction and the acclimatization phase into a new environment and assessed the expression of activity, alertness, and habituation in an invasive Mediterranean population of the South African nudibranch Godiva quadricolor comparing its profiles with those of the sympatric Mediterranean native nudibranchs Cratena peregrina and Caloria quatrefagesi. Individuals of these 3 species were subjected to 3 behavioral tests: spontaneous activity, carried out in the introduction phase (immediately after sampling) and after a week of acclimatization; alert test, in which a potential threat was simulated by means of a tactile stimulus, and habituation test, in which the same alert test stimulus was repeated 5 times at 30-min intervals. The invasive G. quadricolor showed higher levels of exploration activity, thigmotaxis, alertness, and sensitization than the native species. These behavioral traits may represent pivotal drivers of the ongoing invasion process.

  • Lopez-Hervas, Karem; Porwal, Neelam; Delacoux, Mathilde; Vezyrakis, Alexandros; Guenther, Anja
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2024年第70卷第3期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoae005
    关键词: DEVELOPMENTAL PLASTICITY; INDIVIDUAL-DIFFERENCES; PREBREEDING DIET; PERSONALITY; EVOLUTION; FLEXIBILITY; ECOLOGY; QUALITY; CONSEQUENCES; INFORMATION
    摘要: Environmental conditions change constantly either by anthropogenic perturbation or naturally across space and time. Often, a change in behavior is the first response to changing conditions. Behavioral flexibility can potentially improve an organism's chances to survive and reproduce. Currently, we lack an understanding on the time-scale such behavioral adjustments need, how they actually affect reproduction and survival and whether behavioral adjustments are sufficient in keeping up with changing conditions. We used house mice (Mus musculus) to test whether personality and life-history traits can adjust to an experimentally induced food-switch flexibly in adulthood or by intergenerational plasticity, that is, adjustments only becoming visible in the offspring generation. Mice lived in 6 experimental populations of semi-natural environments either on high or standard quality food for 4 generations. We showed previously that high-quality food induced better conditions and a less risk-prone personality. Here, we tested whether the speed and/ or magnitude of adjustment shows condition-dependency and whether adjustments incur fitness effects. Life-history but not personality traits reacted flexibly to a food-switch, primarily by a direct reduction of reproduction and slowed-down growth. Offspring whose parents received a food-switch developed a more active stress-coping personality and gained weight at a slower rate compared with their respective controls. Furthermore, the modulation of most traits was condition-dependent, with animals previously fed with high-quality food showing stronger responses. Our study highlights that life-history and personality traits adjust at different speed toward environmental change, thus, highlighting the importance of the environment and the mode of response for evolutionary models.

  • Ruberto, Tommaso; Swaney, William T.; Reddon, Adam R.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2024年第70卷第6期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoae014
    关键词: NEOLAMPROLOGUS-PULCHER PISCES; ENRICHMENT REDUCES AGGRESSION; CICHLID FISH; HABITAT STRUCTURE; GROUP-SIZE; CONFLICT-MANAGEMENT; BENEFITS; COMPETITION; EVOLUTION; DOMINANCE
    摘要: Group living may engender conflict over food, reproduction, or other resources and individuals must be able to manage conflict for social groups to persist. Submission signals are an adaptation for establishing and maintaining social hierarchy position, allowing a subordinate individual to avoid protracted and costly aggressive interactions with dominant individuals. In the daffodil cichlid fish (Neolamprologus pulcher), subordinates may use submission signals to resolve conflicts with dominant individuals and maintain their social status within the group. The complexity of the physical environment may affect the value of submission signals compared with fleeing or avoidance, which may require certain physical features such as shelters to be effective. We investigated how the ecological context affected the expression of submission in subordinate daffodil cichlids by examining their behavior under different arrangements of the physical environment within their territories. We altered the number of shelters provided to daffodil cichlid groups and compared the interactions between dominant and subordinate individuals under each shelter condition by scoring the social and cooperative behaviors of the group members. We found that behaviors of group members were modulated by the environment: subordinates displayed fewer submission and fleeing behaviors in more structurally complex environments and dominants were more aggressive to subordinates when more shelters were present. Our results help to elucidate the role of the physical environment in the modulation of social interactions in group-living animals and may have implications for the welfare of captively housed social cichlid groups.

  • Gromov, Vladimir S.
    CURRENT ZOOLOGY 2024年第70卷第5期 DOI:10.1093/cz/zoae004
    关键词: ETHOLOGICAL POPULATION-STRUCTURE; INDIAN DESERT GERBIL; APODEMUS-SYLVATICUS; MONGOLIAN-GERBIL; MARKING BEHAVIOR; SCENT MARKING; SYMPATRIC POPULATIONS; SPATIAL-ORGANIZATION; NEGEV HIGHLANDS; EVOLUTION
    摘要: The present review provides a compilation of the published data on the ecology and social behavior of tamarisk gerbils. Both field studies and direct observations under semi-natural conditions provide evidence that the tamarisk gerbil is a nocturnal herbivorous rodent that lives in highly seasonal habitats and displays seasonal fluctuations in reproduction and spatial organization. A typical feature of the tamarisk gerbils' spatial organization is higher mobility of males during the breeding season (as compared with the nonbreeding period) and formation of temporary aggregations of males competing for access to receptive females; the composition of these aggregations was variable and depended on the reproductive condition of the females. Females tend to occupy exclusive home ranges irrespective of their reproductive condition. The mating system of the species can be defined as scramble competition polygyny with some features of polygynandry and promiscuity. The tamarisk gerbil has distinct features of a solitary species and its social structure is primarily based on aggressive interactions or mutual avoidance of conspecifics resulting in a dominance hierarchy among males and site-dependent dominance among females during the breeding season. By the end of the breeding season, males become less mobile and occupy nearly exclusive home ranges, consistent with solitary living. The main features of the spatial and social organization of this species, which distinguish it from other solitary rodents, are the higher mobility of males and the formation of temporary multimale-multifemale aggregations during the breeding season. Overall, the data presented expand our understanding of socioecology of gerbils.