| Literature DB >> 28505095 |
Giovanni Quintavalle Pastorino1, Yiannis Christodoulides2, Giulio Curone3, Paul Pearce-Kelly4, Massimo Faustini5, Mariangela Albertini6, Richard Preziosi7, Silvia Michela Mazzola8.
Abstract
Three brown bear (Ursusarctosarctos) individuals and two sloth bear (Melursusursinusinornatus) individuals were observed in captivity to produce behavioural profiles for each individual. Data collected through behavioural observations were used to produce activity budgets, and to identify space usage and certain aspects of social behavior. Behaviour monitoring allowed the researchers to evaluate the welfare of the animals by identifying the occurrence of stereotypic behaviours, which are sometimes associated with stress. Behavioural profiles were created using data obtained through behavioural observations (coding) and keeper questionnaires (rating). The behavioural observations indicated a number of stereotypic behaviours in sloth bears but not in brown bears. The uniformity of zone usage was calculated to investigate if the enclosure size and features were adequate for use, and a social aspect of otherwise solitary animals was also identified. The behavioural profiles generated through coding and rating were compared to determine the reliability between these two methods in Ursids. Profiles were not compared between individuals since this study is not a comparison between different personality types but rather an effort (one of the few ones existing in literature) to select a valid and reproducible methodology capable of assessing personality in bears.Entities:
Keywords: Melursus ursinus; Ursus arctos; bear; behaviour; personality
Year: 2017 PMID: 28505095 PMCID: PMC5447921 DOI: 10.3390/ani7050039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Animals involved in the study.
| Name | Species | Sex | Born | Born in | Relationship to Other Study Animals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wendy | Brown Bear | Female | 26/03/1991 | Captivity | None |
| Wellington | Brown Bear | Female | 15/01/1993 | Captivity | Sister of Winslow |
| Winslow | Brown Bear | Female | 15/01/1993 | Captivity | Sister of Wellington |
| Ursula | Sloth Bear | Female | 04/02/2001 | Captivity | Sister of Colombo |
| Colombo | Sloth Bear | Male | 05/01/1998 | Captivity | Brother of Ursula |
Figure 1(A) Sloth bear enclosure and (B) brown bear enclosure. The pictures show the enclosures’ division into zones, used for zone usage and the Spread of Participation Index (SPI).
Categories of behaviours exhibited by the bears during observations (adapted from Highfill [22]).
| Behaviour | Description |
|---|---|
| Inactive | Bear is lying, sitting, standing on four paws or upright on two paws whether on land or water. Lying can be on the side, stomach, or back. |
| Foraging and Eating | Bear is actively searching and consuming food. This includes digging to get to food. Distinction between foraging and eating is not made because handling time is minimal or absent in some cases. |
| Locomotion | Movement of the bear like walking on land and water, running or climbing trees or other structures. |
| Stereotypic | Behaviour not exhibited in the wild. In this case it is pacing, which is walking repeatedly, for more than 30’, along the same path. |
| Aggression | Aggressive displays towards conspecifics or people. |
| Maintenance | Natural somatic behaviours like drinking water, urinating, defecating, grooming, or scratching. |
| Affiliation | Positive/friendly behaviours towards conspecifics like playing, sniffing, and rubbing. |
| Exploration | Interacting with the environment whether handling, sniffing, or rubbing against objects or parts of the enclosure. |
| Vocal | Sounds emitted by the bears to show danger, alarm, anger, or intimidation like barking and growling. |
Each domain has a positive and a negative part and behaviours were assigned to each one. Some had no corresponding observed behaviours.
| Openness to Experience | Extroversion | Agreeableness | Neuroticism |
|---|---|---|---|
| + | + | + | + |
| Exploration | Vocal | Affiliation | Aggression |
| Foraging and eating | Locomotion | Stereotypic | |
| Foraging and eating | |||
| − | − | − | − |
| Inactive | Solitary |
Adjectives and domains used for trait ratings, based on the human Five Factor Model. Except for Openness to experience, which was the only one with no corresponding negative adjectives, each domain has a positive and a negative part.
| Openness to Experience | Extroversion | Agreeableness | Neuroticism |
|---|---|---|---|
| + | + | + | + |
| Curious | Active | Friendly to conspecifics | Aggression to conspecifics |
| Smart | Playful | Friendly to keepers | Aggression to familiars |
| Vocal | Friendly to familiars | Aggression to unfamiliars | |
| Excitable | Friendly to unfamiliars | Tense | |
| Eccentric | |||
| − | − | − | − |
| Fear of conspecifics | Solitary | Calm | |
| Fear of familiars | Self-Assured | ||
| Fear of unfamiliars | |||
| Insecure |
Figure 2Column charts showing the activity budget of all individuals that were observed: (a,b) are sloth bears and (c–e) are brown bears.
Table showing zone usage for each individual and each zone. N is the observed frequency of the individual in that zone and D is the difference between the expected and the observed frequency. A negative value indicates less usage than expected and a positive value indicates more usage than expected. SPI is the spread participation index with a scale of 0–1, with 0 being even usage and 1 being usage in one area.
| Species | Animal | Zone 1 | Zone 2 | Zone 3 | Zone 4 | Zone 5 | SPI | Mean SPI | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sloth | Ursula | 327 | 309 | 366 | 72 | 176 | −120 | 122 | −97 | 59 | −163 | 0.369 | 0.365 |
| Colombo | 286 | 268 | 398 | 104 | 213 | −83 | 133 | −86 | 20 | −201 | 0.360 | ||
| Brown | Wendy | 97 | 37 | 64 | −20 | 50 | −107 | 347 | 150 | 156 | −60 | 0.286 | 0.310 |
| Wellington | 132 | 72 | 62 | −22 | 45 | −112 | 365 | 168 | 110 | −106 | 0.367 | ||
| Winslow | 87 | 27 | 29 | −55 | 30 | −127 | 349 | 152 | 219 | −3 | 0.278 | ||
Figure 3Behavioural profiles showing the domains of Ursula: (a) was created using observations (behavioural coding) and (b) was created from the questionnaires (trait ratings).
Figure 4Behavioural profiles showing the domains of Colombo: (a) was created using observations (behavioural coding) and (b) was created from the questionnaires (trait ratings).
Figure 5Behavioural profiles showing the domains of Wendy: (a) was created using observations (behavioural coding) and (b) was created from the questionnaires (trait ratings).
Figure 6Behavioural profiles showing the domains of Wellington: (a) was created using observations (behavioural coding) and (b) was created from the questionnaires (trait ratings).
Figure 7Behavioural profiles showing the domains of Winslow: (a) was created using observations (behavioural coding) and (b) was created from the questionnaires (trait ratings).