| Literature DB >> 30202642 |
Caterina Spiezio1, Valentina Valsecchi2, Camillo Sandri3,4, Barbara Regaiolli1.
Abstract
The Northern bald ibis (Geronticus eremita) (NBI) is one of the most threatened birds in the world. Intense conservation efforts have been undertaken and several research projects on the species are being done in Morocco and in Europe. Observing animal behaviour has been proved to be an efficient and non-invasive technique to assess the animal welfare, with the performance of a wide array of natural behaviours being one of the mostly used indicators of good mental and physical well-being. The aim of this study was to investigate the behaviour of a flock of 14 zoo-living NBI of different ages. The study focused on the variety of species-specific individual and social behaviours, in the light of reintroduction of the study juveniles in the wild. Per subject, 20 10-min. sessions were done. A continuous focal animal sampling method was used to collect individual and social behaviours. Behavioural data have been compared between adults and juveniles. Moreover, a Behavioural Variety Index (BVI) has been proposed and calculated based on previous literature describing natural ibis behaviours. The BVI might help in the evaluation of the variety of behaviours performed by each individual and the monitoring of the diversity of the behavioural repertoire of zoo animals. Our results showed that the birds performed species-specific behaviours and no abnormal behaviour was reported. Moreover, the BVI highlighted a good behavioural variety as each bird performed approximately 78% of the natural behaviours described in the Northern bald ibis and in close relative species. Our findings seem to suggest the presence of qualitative and quantitative similarities between the behavioural repertoires of the study ibises and those described in wild conspecifics, suggesting a good welfare of the colony. Finally, the BVI proposed in the current study seems to be a useful and practical tool to test behavioural diversity in zoo animals.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioural Variety Index; Ethogram; Threskiornithidae; Welfare
Year: 2018 PMID: 30202642 PMCID: PMC6128256 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.5436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Northern bald ibises of the study.
For each subject, the table reports the identification band (ID-Band), the sex (M = male, F = female), the year of birth (Born in) and the age class.
| ID-band | Sex | Born in | Age class |
|---|---|---|---|
| YK-blue | M | 2003 | Adult |
| CW-red | F | 2003 | Adult |
| YV-red | F | 2004 | Adult |
| XP-blue | M | 2004 | Adult |
| FA-red | M | 2005 | Adult |
| CN-green | F | 2006 | Adult |
| YZ-green | F | 2006 | Adult |
| UA-red | M | 2012 | Juvenile |
| RK-red | M | 2012 | Juvenile |
| TY-green | M | 2013 | Juvenile |
| HZ-green | M | 2013 | Juvenile |
| GA-green | M | 2013 | Juvenile |
| TV-green | M | 2013 | Juvenile |
| CX-green | M | 2013 | Juvenile |
Behavioural ethogram of the study.
The behaviour list has been prepared based on preliminary observation of the flock and on previous studies on the Northern bald ibis as well as on relative species (Hirsch, 1979; Kopij, 1998; Pegoraro & Föger, 2001; Mark, 2007; Vargas-Ashby & Pankhurst, 2007; Clark et al., 2012; Fernández-Juricic, 2012; Moulton et al., 2013; Frigerio et al., 2016).
| Alertness | Moving the head, stretching the neck listening or watching something in the surrounding. | |
| Attentive behaviour | Being vigilant, scanning the environment. | |
| Comfort behaviour | Tidying and cleaning the own feathers with the bill, scratching, bathing and sunbathing (fanning the wings to warm up in the sun). | |
| Exploration | Looking for food probing the ground, tree branches, crevices and other elements of the aviary with the bill. | |
| Flight | Flying or hopping from one point to the other of the enclosure. | |
| Walking | Walking around the aviary. | |
| Maintenance | Eating the food provided in the feeding point, defecating, drinking. | |
| Manipulation/play | Manipulating food, objects, twigs, rocks or other inanimate items found in the aviary using the bill or the legs. | |
| Resting | Standing on one or both legs, with the head turned back and tucked beneath the wings. | |
| Preening | Tidying and cleaning the feathers of a conspecific with the bill. | |
| Other affiliative | Greeting displays including head tossing, head rubbing, mutual bill shaking; observing conspecifics. | |
| Aggression | Pecking towards approaching birds, hitting a conspecific with the bill or with the legs. | |
| Agonistic display | Bill gaping, ruffling the helmsman feathers, moving or lunging toward conspecifics, touching slightly with the tip of the bill. Anti-predatory behaviour (e.g.: mobbing). | |
| Out of sight | The ibis spends time “out of sight” and it is not possible to see what the individual is doing. In particular, the bird is in sheltered areas such as nest boxes, rock crevices or behind trees and bushes. | |
Behaviours of the Northern bald ibis described in previous research.
Behaviours have been grouped in four main groups and the number of behaviours per group was used to develop indices of the ibis behavioural variety in the study flock. The possible score for each group is calculated starting from the number of behaviours that have been previously described in the Northern bald ibis and in close relative species (Geronticus calvus).
| Routine b. (B) | Exploration/Attention b. (E) | Comfort b. (C) | Social b. (S) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flight | Probing ground | Preening & scratching | Agonistic display |
| Walking | Probing vegetation | Bathing | Aggression |
| Resting | Manipulation/Play | Sun bathing | Preening |
| Defecation | Attentive behaviour | Greeting (sweeping head movements) | |
| Eating (food from zookeeper)/drinking | Alertness | Anti-predatory (mobbing) | |
Notes.
Kopij (1998).
Mark (2007).
Clark et al. (2012).
Pegoraro & Föger (2001).
Hirsch (1979).
Frigerio et al. (2016).
Vargas-Ashby & Pankhurst (2007).
Moulton et al. (2013).
Fernández-Juricic (2012).
Figure 1Behavioural repertoire of the study Northern bald ibis.
The pie-chart reports the % total duration (seconds) of individual and social behaviours performed by the study flock. Percentages are calculated on the total observation time of the colony (20 sessions, 168,000 s).
Individual and social behaviours in adult and juvenile Northern bald ibises,
Median (IQR) per behavioural category for adults and juveniles. Below the data of the two age-groups the U and p from the Mann–Whitney test (MW) are also reported.
| Individual b. | 232 (157–345) | 1,893 (1,318–2,103) | 3,225 (2,869–4,384) | 1,097 (992–1,868) | ||
| 339 (206–482) | 1,741 (1,511–1,951) | 2,519 (2,121–2,711) | 2,834 (2,485–3,087) | |||
| 517 (320–560) | 699 (493–786) | 652 (445–710) | 422 (247–598) | 1,540 (1,440–2,145) | ||
| 510 (478–690) | 1,010 (546–1,144) | 720 (551–834) | 589 (298–633) | 1,015 (596–1,425) | ||
| Social b. | 29 (0–151) | 274 (242–366) | 217 (76–250) | 81 (0–248) | ||
| 25 (23–131) | 480 (355–539) | 132 (89–170) | 0 (0–0) | |||
Notes.
*Indicate behavioural categories for which a significant difference between adults and juveniles was found (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Individual behaviours in adults and juveniles.
The bar-chart reports the % mean duration (in seconds) of different individual behaviours performed by both adult and juvenile ibises. Asterisks indicate categories in which a significant difference between age groups was found (Mann–Whitney test: p < 0.05).
Figure 3Social behaviours in adults and juveniles.
The bar-chart reports the % mean duration of different social behaviours performed by both adult and juvenile ibises.
Figure 4Distribution of scores for the four behavioural indices.
Different bar boxes report the number of behavioural items that have been performed per group of behaviours: Routine behaviour, Exploration/Attention behaviour (Expl/Att), Comfort behaviour, Social behaviour. The total number of behaviours (score) that could be performed varied from 3 (Comfort b.) to 5 and has been specified in each box of the plot.
Figure 5Summary of the BVI scores.
The numbers indicated in the legend refer to the total number of behavioural items performed by the ibises, whereas the percentages reported on the pie refer to the number of subjects performing the behavioural items.