Literature DB >> 24896672

The role of recent experience and weight on hen's agonistic behaviour during dyadic conflict resolution.

F Martin1, J P Beaugrand1, P C Laguë2.   

Abstract

Recent victory or defeat experiences and 2-h familiarity with the meeting place were combined with size differences in order to better understand their effects on the behaviour leading to the establishment of dyadic dominance relationships between hens not previously acquainted with each other. Three kinds of encounters were videotaped: (i) A previous winner unfamiliar with the meeting place met a previous loser familiar for 2 h with the meeting place (n=12 dyads); (ii) as in (i) but both were unfamiliar with the meeting place (n=12); (iii) as in (i) but the previous winner was familiar with the meeting place while the previous loser was unfamiliar (n=13). The weight asymmetry was combined with these three types of encounters by selecting hens of various weight differences: In 29 dyads the recent loser was heavier than the recent winner and in eight dyads it was the reverse. Recent experience had a major influence upon both agonistic behaviour and dominance outcome. Hens that were familiar with the meeting site initiated attacks more frequently than their unfamiliar opponent but did not win significantly more often. Recent experience and site familiarity could be used to identify 80% of future initiators. Once the first aggressive behaviour had been initiated, it led to victory of its initiator in 92% of cases. Weight was not found to influence agonistic behaviour nor dominance outcome. However, hens with superior comb and wattles areas won significantly more initial meetings than opponents with smaller ones. In the final encounters, victory also went more frequently to the bird showing larger comb and wattles, which happened also to be the previous dominant in a majority of cases. The use of higher-order partial correlations as an ex post facto control for comb and wattles indicates that they were not influential upon agonistic behaviour nor on dominance outcome, but were simply co-selected with the selection of victorious and defeated birds in the first phase of the experiment designed to let hens acquire recent victory/defeat experience.

Entities:  

Year:  1997        PMID: 24896672     DOI: 10.1016/s0376-6357(97)00044-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Processes        ISSN: 0376-6357            Impact factor:   1.777


  2 in total

1.  The looks matter; aggression escalation from changes on phenotypic appearance in the domestic fowl.

Authors:  Irene Campderrich; Guiomar Liste; Inma Estevez
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-12-20       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Winner-loser effects overrule aggressiveness during the early stages of contests between pigs.

Authors:  Lucy Oldham; Irene Camerlink; Gareth Arnott; Andrea Doeschl-Wilson; Marianne Farish; Simon P Turner
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-08-07       Impact factor: 4.379

  2 in total

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