| Literature DB >> 31042740 |
Rachel Dale1,2, Sylvain Palma-Jacinto1,3, Sarah Marshall-Pescini1,2, Friederike Range1,2.
Abstract
Prosociality is important for initiating cooperation. Interestingly, while wolves rely heavily on cooperation, dogs' do so substantially less thus leading to the prediction that wolves are more prosocial than dogs. However, domestication hypotheses suggest dogs have been selected for higher cooperation, leading to the opposing prediction- increased prosocial tendencies in dogs. To tease apart these hypotheses we adapted a paradigm previously used with pet dogs to directly compare dogs and wolves. In a prosocial choice task, wolves acted prosocially to in-group partners; providing significantly more food to a pack-member compared to a control where the partner had no access to the food. Dogs did not. Additionally, wolves did not show a prosocial response to non-pack members, in line with previous research that social relationships are important for prosociality. In sum, when kept in the same conditions, wolves are more prosocial than their domestic counterpart, further supporting suggestions that reliance on cooperation is a driving force for prosocial attitudes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31042740 PMCID: PMC6493736 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0215444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Set-up of the test condition.
After a ‘giving’ choice by the subject (right), the partner (left) was rewarded. A transparent door between the two enclosures allowed the subject to see whether a partner was rewarded for their actions or not, as well as the identity of the partner. See also S1 Fig.
Fig 2Number of giving trials performed by wolves and dogs in the test and respective social facilitation control conditions.
IG = in-group, OG = out-group. Test = partner had access to the reward, control = partner was in present but had no access to the reward. Error bars represent standard error of the mean. The values depict the raw data.
Subject details.
| Subject | Subject Sex | In-group Partner | Out-group Partner | Partner Sex |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wolves | ||||
| Kaspar | M | Shima | Yukon | F |
| Aragorn | M | Tala | Yukon | F |
| Shima | F | Aragorn | Nanuk | M |
| Yukon | F | Geronimo | Amarok | M |
| Kenai | M | Amarok | Yukon | M/F |
| Wamblee | M | Yukon | Tala | F |
| Tala | F | Chitto | Amarok | M |
| Ela | F | Etu | Wamblee | M |
| Etu | M | Maikan | Wamblee | M |
| Dogs | ||||
| Asali | M | Bora | Nia | F |
| Enzi | M | Zuri | Bora | F |
| Meru | M | Hiari | Banzai | M |
| Nuru | M | Enzi | Banzai | M |
| Pepeo | M | Nuru | Sahibu | M |
| Zuri | F | Pepeo | Asali | M |