Wing condition does not negatively impact time budget, enclosure usage, or social bonds in a flock of both full-winged and flight-restrained greater flamingos.

IF 1.2 4区 生物学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES Zoo Biology Pub Date : 2023-11-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-23 DOI:10.1002/zoo.21791
Adam J George, Paul E Rose
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Abstract

Zoo management techniques for captive birds, such as flight restraint and enclosure type, may affect behavioral performance and are consequently worthy of investigation. Flamingos are amongst the most popular of zoo-housed birds and, as such, research into their captive management and associated behavioral responses are widely applicable to many thousands of individuals. As a highly social species, understanding social bonds and behavior of the individual bird and the flock overall can help inform decisions that support husbandry and population management. In this project, 41 greater flamingos at Bristol Zoo Gardens were observed for 49 days across spring and summer 2013 to assess the following: (i) social associations within the flock, (ii) overall activity patterns, and (iii) distribution of time within specific enclosure zones for both full-winged and flight-restrained birds living in the same enclosure. Results showed that pinioning interacted with age in regard to flamingo time-activity patterns, but wing condition did not significantly influence association patterns, performance of social interactions, or performance of breeding behavior. Social network analysis revealed that associations were nonrandom and flamingos, of either wing condition, displayed different roles within the network. Birds of similar age formed the strongest bonds. Enclosure usage was not even, suggesting that the flamingos favored specific areas of the enclosure during the observation period. This study showed that wing condition does not affect flamingo behavior, social bonds, or space use, and that age and sex have more of an overall influence on what flamingos do, and with whom they chose to do it. Further research should extend this study into other, larger captive flocks to further refine behavioral measures of welfare for these popular zoo birds.

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在全翼和飞行受限的大火烈鸟群中,翅膀状况不会对时间预算、圈地使用或社会关系产生负面影响。
动物园对圈养鸟类的管理技术,如飞行限制和圈养类型,可能会影响鸟类的行为表现,因此值得研究。火烈鸟是动物园里最受欢迎的鸟类之一,因此,对它们的圈养管理和相关行为反应的研究广泛适用于成千上万的个体。作为一个高度社会化的物种,了解个体和群体的社会关系和行为有助于为支持畜牧业和种群管理的决策提供信息。在这个项目中,研究人员在2013年春夏对布里斯托尔动物园的41只大火烈鸟进行了49天的观察,以评估以下内容:(i)鸟群内的社会联系,(ii)整体活动模式,以及(iii)生活在同一围栏中的全翼和飞行受限鸟类在特定围栏区内的时间分布。结果表明,羽翼与年龄对火烈鸟的时间-活动模式有交互作用,但羽翼条件对火烈鸟的交往模式、社会交往表现和繁殖行为表现没有显著影响。社会网络分析表明,联系是非随机的,两种情况下的火烈鸟在网络中表现出不同的角色。年龄相仿的鸟类形成了最牢固的纽带。围场的使用并不均匀,这表明在观察期间,火烈鸟喜欢围场的特定区域。这项研究表明,翅膀状况不会影响火烈鸟的行为、社会关系或空间使用,年龄和性别对火烈鸟的行为以及它们选择和谁一起做这件事有更大的总体影响。进一步的研究应该将这项研究扩展到其他更大的圈养鸟类,以进一步完善这些受欢迎的动物园鸟类的福利行为指标。
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来源期刊
Zoo Biology
Zoo Biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
15.40%
发文量
85
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Zoo Biology is concerned with reproduction, demographics, genetics, behavior, medicine, husbandry, nutrition, conservation and all empirical aspects of the exhibition and maintenance of wild animals in wildlife parks, zoos, and aquariums. This diverse journal offers a forum for effectively communicating scientific findings, original ideas, and critical thinking related to the role of wildlife collections and their unique contribution to conservation.
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