| Literature DB >> 29051227 |
Valerio Sbragaglia1, David Leiva2, Anna Arias3, Jose Antonio García3, Jacopo Aguzzi3, Thomas Breithaupt4.
Abstract
Animals fight over resources such as mating partners, territory, food or shelter and repeated contests lead to stable social hierarchies in different phyla. The group dynamics of hierarchy formation are not characterized in the Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus). Lobsters spend most of the day in burrows and forage outside of them according to a diel (i.e. 24 h-based) activity rhythm. Here, we use a linear and generalized mixed model approach to analyse, in seven groups of four male lobsters, the formation of dominance hierarchies and rank-related changes in burrowing behaviour. We show that hierarchies emerge within 1-3 days and increase in steepness over a period of 5 days, while rank changes and number of fights gradually decrease over a 5-day period. The rank position determined by open area fights predicts the outcome of fights over burrows, the time spent in burrows, and the locomotor activity levels. Dominant lobsters are more likely to evict subordinate lobsters from their burrows and are more successful in defending their own burrows. They spend more time in burrows and display lower levels of locomotor activity outside the burrow. Lobsters do not change their diel activity rhythms as a result of a change in rank, and all tested individuals showed higher activity at night and dusk compared with dawn and daytime. We discuss how behavioural changes in burrowing behaviour could lead to rank-related benefits such as reduced exposure to predators and energy savings.Entities:
Keywords: Biological rhythms; Contest behaviour; Fitness, Locomotor activity; Steepness; Temporal niche
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29051227 DOI: 10.1242/jeb.165969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Biol ISSN: 0022-0949 Impact factor: 3.312