Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl

The ability to dominate conspecifics and thereby gain access to resources depends on a number of traits and skills. Experience of dominance relationships during development is a potential source of learning such skills. We here study the importance of social experience, aggressiveness and morphologi...

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Main Authors: Anna Favati, Hanne Løvlie, Olof Leimar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2021-02-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.201213
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spelling doaj-f2d9caa8aeae40d79efa0a2a2809ff812021-03-15T15:27:03ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032021-02-018210.1098/rsos.201213201213Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowlAnna FavatiHanne LøvlieOlof LeimarThe ability to dominate conspecifics and thereby gain access to resources depends on a number of traits and skills. Experience of dominance relationships during development is a potential source of learning such skills. We here study the importance of social experience, aggressiveness and morphological traits for competitiveness in social interactions (contest success) in male domestic fowl (Gallus gallus domesticus). We let males grow up either as a single (dominant) male or as an intermediately ranked male in a group of males, and measured their success in duels against different opponents. We found that single-raised males had lower contest success than group-raised males, and that aggression and comb size correlated positively with contest success. This indicates that experience of dominance interactions with other males increases future success in duels. We similarly studied the consequences of growing up as a dominant or subordinate in a pair of males, finding no statistically significant effect of the dominance position on contest success. Finally, we found that males were consistent over time in contest success. We conclude that social experience increases contest success in male domestic fowl, but that certain behavioural and morphological characteristics have an equal or even stronger covariation with contest success.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.201213aggressionintra-sexual selectionontogenysocial dominancesocial ranksocial status
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Favati
Hanne Løvlie
Olof Leimar
spellingShingle Anna Favati
Hanne Løvlie
Olof Leimar
Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
Royal Society Open Science
aggression
intra-sexual selection
ontogeny
social dominance
social rank
social status
author_facet Anna Favati
Hanne Løvlie
Olof Leimar
author_sort Anna Favati
title Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
title_short Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
title_full Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
title_fullStr Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
title_full_unstemmed Effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
title_sort effects of social experience, aggressiveness and comb size on contest success in male domestic fowl
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2021-02-01
description The ability to dominate conspecifics and thereby gain access to resources depends on a number of traits and skills. Experience of dominance relationships during development is a potential source of learning such skills. We here study the importance of social experience, aggressiveness and morphological traits for competitiveness in social interactions (contest success) in male domestic fowl (Gallus gallus domesticus). We let males grow up either as a single (dominant) male or as an intermediately ranked male in a group of males, and measured their success in duels against different opponents. We found that single-raised males had lower contest success than group-raised males, and that aggression and comb size correlated positively with contest success. This indicates that experience of dominance interactions with other males increases future success in duels. We similarly studied the consequences of growing up as a dominant or subordinate in a pair of males, finding no statistically significant effect of the dominance position on contest success. Finally, we found that males were consistent over time in contest success. We conclude that social experience increases contest success in male domestic fowl, but that certain behavioural and morphological characteristics have an equal or even stronger covariation with contest success.
topic aggression
intra-sexual selection
ontogeny
social dominance
social rank
social status
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.201213
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