| Literature DB >> 31291268 |
Julie K Young1,2, Laura Touzot3, Stacey P Brummer1.
Abstract
Social learning has important ecological and evolutionary consequences but the role of certain factors, such as social rank, neophobia (i.e., avoidance of novel stimuli), persistence, and task-reward association, remain less understood. We examined the role of these factors in social learning by captive coyotes (Canis latrans) via three studies. Study 1 involved individual animals and eliminated object neophobia by familiarizing the subjects to the testing apparatus prior to testing. Studies 2 and 3 used mated pairs to assess social rank, and included object neophobia, but differed in that study 3 decoupled the food reward from the testing apparatus (i.e., altered task-reward association). For all three studies, we compared performance between coyotes that received a demonstration from a conspecific to control animals with no demonstration prior to testing. Coyotes displayed social learning during study 1; coyotes with a demonstrator were faster and more successful at solving the puzzle box but did not necessarily use the same modality as that observed to be successful. In study 2, there was no difference in success between treatment groups but this is likely because only one coyote within each pair was successful so successful coyote results were masked by their unsuccessful mate. In study 3, there was no difference in success between treatment groups; only two coyotes, both dominant, hand-reared males with demonstrators were able to perform the task. However, coyotes with a demonstrator were less neophobic, measured as latency to approach the object, and more persistent, measured as time spent working on the apparatus. Social rank was the best predictor of neophobia and persistence and was also retained in the best model for time to eat inside the apparatus, a post-trial measurement of object neophobia. These results suggest coyotes are capable of social learning for novel tasks but social rank, neophobia, and persistence influence their social-learning capabilities. This study contributes to understanding the mechanisms underlying how animals gain information about their environment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31291268 PMCID: PMC6619663 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Designation, description, and measurement of the behaviors observed during three studies on social learning in captive coyotes.
| Behaviour | Description of the behavior | Measurement of the behavior |
|---|---|---|
| Avoidance or fear of a novel stimuli. | ||
| The novel object holds the attention of the individual and the subject interacts with it. Indirection interactions include looking at the object, walking around without any contact, and sniffing/digging/scratching next to the hoop. Direct interactions include investigating the ground in a close perimeter (i.e. less than a body-length) by smelling/searching/digging, investigating the novel object by pushing/pulling/biting it, and going on/into the novel object (i.e. stepping into the hoop). | ||
| The observer watching its assigned demonstrator. | ||
| Any other behavior that is not linked to the apparatus (e.g. interacting with the neighbor, walking randomly in the pen, scratching). | No direct measurement taken; sum of remaining time. |
Fig 1Schematic depicting three of the 1000 m2 enclosures housing single or male-female pairs of coyotes within a single housing block at the USDA-National Wildlife Research Center’s Predator Research Facility (Millville, UT, USA).
The enclosures are tear-drop shaped, adjoined by a common observation building at the narrow ends. Subjects could see immediate neighbors through the chain-link fence at the wider end of the enclosure but could not see neighbors towards the narrow end because of cement walls abutting the observation building. A plywood fence was erected that extended from the cement wall when needed to prevent neighbors from seeing one another at the wide ends.
Fig 2The puzzle box used for task of study 1 (a) and captive coyotes at the USDA-Predator Research Facility performing the task of study 2 (b and c). Observer coyotes opened the puzzle box used in study 1 by pulling on the handles and uncovered the hoop covered with foam board used in study 2 with their muzzle (b) or paws (c).
Sample sizes of captive coyotes at the USDA-National Wildlife Research Center’s Predator Research Facility in Millville, Utah, USA, used in three different studies on social learning.
| Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of demonstrator coyotes | 4 | 2 | 2 |
| Number of control coyotes | 6 | 8 (4 pairs) | 8 (4 pairs) |
| Number of observer coyotes | 6 | 16 (8 pairs) | 20 (10 pairs) |
| Number of successful control coyotes | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| Number of successful observer coyotes | 5 | 4 | 2 |
Set of models fitted to assess the relationship between treatment group and trial number and (A) problem solving success, (B) latency to solve, and (C) persistence.
The error distributions used in the models are specified by model family. Model comparison was based on AICc. Np is the number of parameters, ΔAICc is the difference between the candidate model and the model having the lowest AICc, and ωi is the AICc weight of each model (i.e. measure the likelihood that a given model is the best among the candidate models). Models retained based on the lowest AICc value appears in bold, and models retained based on parsimony rules in italic font.
| Model | Model family | Np | AICc | ΔAICc | ωi |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A) Problem solving success | Binomial | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) | 2 | 58.340 | 11.166 | 0.003 | |
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 7 | 74.552 | 27.378 | 1.066 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 9 | 52.785 | 5.611 | 0.057 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 12 | 62.039 | 14.865 | 0.000 | |
| B) Latency to solve | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) | Log-transformed | 2 | 69.164 | 2.460 | 0.226 |
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 7 | 83.433 | 16.279 | 0.001 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 9 | 82.271 | 15.567 | 0.000 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 12 | 93.912 | 27.208 | 0.000 | |
| C) Peristence | Gamma | ||||
| | |||||
| ~ Treatment group + (1|Coyote ID) | 4 | -71.498 | 0.000 | 0.545 | |
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 7 | -64.014 | 7.884 | 0.013 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 9 | -63.965 | 7.533 | 0.013 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Tria number + (1|Coyote ID) | 12 | -55.411 | 16.087 | 0.000 |
Fig 3Latency to solve a puzzle box in study 1 for successful observer and control coyotes across all trials.
Bar plots show mean ± SE for successful observer coyotes (number of observer coyotes that performed the task successfully on a given trial day is noted within parentheses directly in the bar plot). Sample sizes varied because not all coyotes were successful in every trial. Some control coyotes were also successful. Dots represent latency to solve the task for each successful control coyote in a given trial. ID of the successful control coyote appears directly beside the dot so that repeated successes by the same coyote are easily noted.
Set of models fitted to assess the relationship between (A) problem solving success, treatment group, and trial number; (B) problem solving success within the observer treatment group and attentiveness, neophobia, and persistence; (C) attentiveness; and (D) persistence within the observer treatment group and sex, social rank, and trial number.
The error distributions used in the models are specified by model family. Model comparison was based on AICc. Np is the number of parameters, ΔAICc is the difference between the candidate model and the model having the lowest AICc, and ωi is the AICc weight of each model. Models retained based on the lowest AICc value appears in bold, and models retained based on parsimony rules in italic font.
| Model | Model family | Np | AICc | ΔAICc | ωi |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A) Problem solving success | Binomial | ||||
| ~ Treatment group + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 4 | 21.808 | 1.920 | 0.232 | |
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 7 | 23.123 | 3.235 | 0.120 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 9 | 25.351 | 5.463 | 0.039 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 12 | 35.177 | 15.289 | 0.000 | |
| B) Problem solving success within the observer treatment group | Binomial | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 3 | 33.067 | 13.833 | 0.000 | |
| ~ Attentiveness + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 3 | 35.476 | 16.242 | 0.000 | |
| ~ Neophobia + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 3 | 31.635 | 12.401 | 0.001 | |
| ~ Persistence + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 3 | 20.115 | 0.881 | 0.277 | |
| ~ Attentiveness + Neophobia + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 4 | 34.148 | 14.914 | 0.001 | |
| ~ Neophobia + Persistence + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 4 | 22.527 | 3.293 | 0.083 | |
| ~ Attentiveness + Neophobia + Persistsence + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 5 | 20.691 | 1.457 | 0.208 | |
| C) Attentiveness within the observer treatment group | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | Log-transformed | 3 | 225.640 | 5.309 | 0.066 |
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 3 | 225.640 | 15.486 | 0.000 | |
| D) Persistence within the observer treatment group | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | Log-transformed | 3 | 273.345 | 3.849 | 0.127 |
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 3 | 273.345 | 22.737 | 0.000 | |
Set of models fitted to assess the relationship between (A) problem solving success, (B) neophobia and (D) persistence and treatment group and trial number, (C) neophobia, and (E) persistence within the observer treatment group and individual characteristics (sex and social rank), and (F) time to eat inside the hoop for unsuccessful coyotes in the post-trial tests and treatment group, sex, and social rank.
The error distributions used in the models are specified by model family. Model comparison was based on AICc. Np is the number of parameters, ΔAICc is the difference between the candidate model and the model having the lowest AICc, and ωi is the AICc weight of each model. Models retained based on the lowest AICc value appears in bold, and models retained based on parsimony rules in italic font.
| Model | Model family | Np | AICc | ΔAICc | ωi |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A) Problem solving success | Binomial | ||||
| ~ Treatment group + (1|Coyote ID) | 3 | 12.791 | 2.054 | 0.260 | |
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 7 | 19.281 | 8.544 | 0.010 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 9 | 21.463 | 10.726 | 0.003 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) | 12 | 30.677 | 19.940 | 0.000 | |
| B) Neophobia | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | Log-transformed | 2 | 364.341 | 3.147 | 0.095 |
| | |||||
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 7 | 365.606 | 4.412 | 0.050 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 9 | 363.493 | 2.299 | 0.145 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 12 | 363.194 | 0.000 | 0.457 | |
| C) Neophobia within the observer treatment group | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | Log-transformed | 3 | 299.538 | 7.425 | 0.010 |
| ~ Sex + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 5 | 298.815 | 6.702 | 0.014 | |
| | |||||
| ~ Sex + Social rank + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 8 | 293.891 | 1.778 | 0.167 | |
| ~ Sex * Social rank + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 9 | 292.113 | 0.000 | 0.407 | |
| D) Persistence | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | Log-transformed | 2 | 374.470 | 2.990 | 0.097 |
| | |||||
| ~ Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 7 | 373.219 | 1.739 | 0.182 | |
| ~ Treatment group + Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 9 | 371.480 | 0.000 | 0.434 | |
| ~ Treatment group x Trial number + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) | 12 | 376.293 | 4.813 | 0.039 | |
| E) Persistence within the observer treatment group | Gaussian | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | Log-transformed | 3 | 274.163 | 5.804 | 0.026 |
| ~ Sex + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 5 | 271.519 | 3.160 | 0.097 | |
| ~ Sex + Social rank + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 8 | 270.085 | 1.726 | 0.199 | |
| ~ Sex * Social rank + (1|Coyote ID) + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 9 | 270.007 | 1.648 | 0.207 | |
| F) Latency to eat inside the hoop | Gamma | ||||
| ~ 1 + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 2 | 186.584 | 33.961 | 0.000 | |
| ~ Treatment group + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 4 | 188.570 | 36.127 | 0.000 | |
| ~ Sex + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 4 | 167.772 | 15.149 | 0.000 | |
| ~ Sex + Social rank + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 7 | 158.442 | 5.819 | 0.052 | |
| ~ Sex * Social rank + (1|Pair ID) + (1|Age class) | 8 | 211.037 | 58.414 | 0.000 |
Fig 4Mean time ± SE in Study 3 for control (Con) and observer (Obs) coyotes, and for subordinate (Sub), neutral (Neu) and dominant (Dom) individuals within the observer treatment group (a) required to approach the experimental apparatus (seconds) and (b) spent working on the problem. Mean time ± SE for subordinate, neutral and dominant unsuccessful individuals to eat the food inside the hoop during the post-trial tests (minutes).