Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.

Limited resources result in competition among social animals. Nevertheless, social animals also have innate preferences for cooperative behavior. In the present study, 12 dyads of food-deprived rats were tested in four successive trials, and then re-tested as eight triads of food-deprived rats that...

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Main Authors: Omri Weiss, Alex Dorfman, Tamar Ram, Pazit Zadicario, David Eilam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5344391?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-31b58380acd24e58ab19b7a38b7fb4a62020-11-25T01:01:30ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01123e017330210.1371/journal.pone.0173302Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.Omri WeissAlex DorfmanTamar RamPazit ZadicarioDavid EilamLimited resources result in competition among social animals. Nevertheless, social animals also have innate preferences for cooperative behavior. In the present study, 12 dyads of food-deprived rats were tested in four successive trials, and then re-tested as eight triads of food-deprived rats that were unfamiliar to each other. We found that the food-deprived dyads or triads of rats did not compete for the food available to them at regular spatially-marked locations that they had previously learnt. Rather, these rats traveled together to collect the baits. One rat, or two rats in some triads, lead (ran ahead) to collect most of the baits, but "leaders" differed across trials so that, on average, each rat ultimately collected similar amounts of baits. Regardless of which rat collected the baits, the rats traveled together with no substantial difference among them in terms of their total activity. We suggest that rats, which are a social species that has been found to display reciprocity, have evolved to travel and forage together and to share limited resources. Consequently, they displayed a sort of 'peace economy' that on average resulted in equal access to the baits across trials. For social animals, this type of dynamics is more relaxed, tolerant, and effective in the management of conflicts. Rather than competing for the limited available food, the food-deprived rats socialized and coexisted peacefully.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5344391?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omri Weiss
Alex Dorfman
Tamar Ram
Pazit Zadicario
David Eilam
spellingShingle Omri Weiss
Alex Dorfman
Tamar Ram
Pazit Zadicario
David Eilam
Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Omri Weiss
Alex Dorfman
Tamar Ram
Pazit Zadicario
David Eilam
author_sort Omri Weiss
title Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
title_short Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
title_full Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
title_fullStr Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
title_full_unstemmed Rats do not eat alone in public: Food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
title_sort rats do not eat alone in public: food-deprived rats socialize rather than competing for baits.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Limited resources result in competition among social animals. Nevertheless, social animals also have innate preferences for cooperative behavior. In the present study, 12 dyads of food-deprived rats were tested in four successive trials, and then re-tested as eight triads of food-deprived rats that were unfamiliar to each other. We found that the food-deprived dyads or triads of rats did not compete for the food available to them at regular spatially-marked locations that they had previously learnt. Rather, these rats traveled together to collect the baits. One rat, or two rats in some triads, lead (ran ahead) to collect most of the baits, but "leaders" differed across trials so that, on average, each rat ultimately collected similar amounts of baits. Regardless of which rat collected the baits, the rats traveled together with no substantial difference among them in terms of their total activity. We suggest that rats, which are a social species that has been found to display reciprocity, have evolved to travel and forage together and to share limited resources. Consequently, they displayed a sort of 'peace economy' that on average resulted in equal access to the baits across trials. For social animals, this type of dynamics is more relaxed, tolerant, and effective in the management of conflicts. Rather than competing for the limited available food, the food-deprived rats socialized and coexisted peacefully.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5344391?pdf=render
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