Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Takeyama Tomohiro
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 6000026214
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Duration of memory of dominance relationships in a group living cichlid

Bibliography Type

Author

Takashi H, Takeyama T, Jordan LA, Kohda M.

Summary

Animal contests are costly and tend to escalate when rivals have similar competitive abilities. Individuals that remember dominance relationships with rivals may avoid repeated agonistic interactions and hence avoid the costs of repeated escalation of contests. However, it can be difficult to experimentally disentangle the effects of memory from those of loser effects (losers behaving subordinately due to prior defeats). Here, we test whether loser effects or individual memory mediate contest behaviour in the African cichlid, Julidochromis transcriptus. We find that on days 3 and 5 after initial contests, losers display subordinate behaviour to contest winners but not to novel contestants. However, this effect disappears after 7 days, at which time losers do not display subordinate behaviour to either rival. These results show that (1) this fish can recall a previously dominant contestant for up to 5 days and (2) as no subordinate displays were shown to the novel contestant, there are no evidences for loser effects in this species. Such short-term memory of past interactions may have broad significance in social species with repeated interactions.

Magazine(name)

Naturwissenschaften

Publisher

Volume

101

Number Of Pages

9

StartingPage

745

EndingPage

751

Date of Issue

2014/09

Referee

Exist

Invited

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-014-1213-z

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID