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Aggression and spatial positioning of kin and non-kin fish in social groups

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Datum der Erstveröffentlichung

2023

Autor:innen

Dabernig-Heinz, Johanna
Grimm, Jacqueline
Sefc, Kristina

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Repositorium der Erstveröffentlichung

DRYAD

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Angaben zur Forschungsförderung

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG): EXC 2117 - 422037984

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Core Facility der Universität Konstanz
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Published

Zusammenfassung

Group-living animals are faced with the challenge of sharing space and local resources amongst group members who may be either relatives or non-relatives. Individuals may reduce the inclusive fitness costs they incur from competing with relatives by either reducing their levels of aggression towards kin or by maintaining physical separation between kin. In this field study, we used the group-living cichlid Neolamprologus multifasciatus to examine whether within-group aggression is reduced among group members that are kin and whether kin occupy different regions of their group’s territory to reduce kin competition over space and local resources. We determined the kinship relationships among cohabiting adults via microsatellite genotyping and then combined these with spatial and behavioural analyses of groups in the wild. We found that aggressive contests between group members declined in frequency with spatial separation between their shelters. Female kin did not engage in aggressive contests with one another, whereas non-kin females did, despite the fact these females lived at similar distances from one another on their groups’ territories. Contests within male-male and male-female dyads did not clearly correlate with kinship. Non-kin male-male and male-female dyads lived at more variable distances from one another on their territories than their corresponding kin dyads. Together, our study indicates that contests among group members can be mediated by relatedness in a sex-dependent manner. We also suggest that spatial relationships can play an important role in determining the extent to which group members compete with one another.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

Fachgebiet (DDC)
570 Biowissenschaften, Biologie

Schlagwörter

group-living, Genetic relatedness, Kin discrimination, Kin selection, sex differences, cichlid, within-group competition, contest behaviour, FOS: Biological sciences, FOS: Biological sciences

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ISO 690BOSE, Aneesh P. H., Johanna DABERNIG-HEINZ, Jan OBERKOFLER, Lukas KOCH, Jacqueline GRIMM, Kristina SEFC, Alex JORDAN, 2023. Aggression and spatial positioning of kin and non-kin fish in social groups
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