共享睡眠场所会扰乱睡眠,但会促进群体间的社会宽容和协调。

IF 3.8 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOLOGY Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-06 DOI:10.1098/rspb.2024.1330
J Carter Loftus, Roi Harel, Alison M Ashbury, Chase L Núñez, George P Omondi, Mathew Muttinda, Akiko Matsumoto-Oda, Lynne A Isbell, Margaret C Crofoot
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引用次数: 0

摘要

睡眠庇护所与其他重要、稀缺和可共享的资源一样,可以成为动物互动的热点,形成吸引和回避的模式。在共享睡眠场所的情况下,个体会在与新的社会伙伴互动的机会和睡眠需求之间进行平衡。通过扩大动物种群内的联系网络,这种夜间社交互动可能会对关键的行为和生态过程产生重要影响,但这些影响在很大程度上尚未被探索。在这里,我们使用全球定位系统和三轴加速度计跟踪野生橄榄狒狒群(Papio anubis)的运动和睡眠模式,结果表明,共享睡眠地点会扰乱睡眠,但似乎会促进群体间的社会容忍度和协调运动。当群体共享一个睡眠场所时,狒狒个体的睡眠时间更短、更零碎。然而,在共享睡眠场所后,原本独立的群体却表现出了强烈的空间吸引模式,它们会在长达3天的时间里共同行动。我们的研究结果突显了夜间社会互动对白天社会关系的影响,并证明了一个种群对限制性资源的依赖和分享需求如何推动了群体间容忍的出现。
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Sharing sleeping sites disrupts sleep but catalyses social tolerance and coordination between groups.

Sleeping refuges-like other important, scarce and shareable resources-can serve as hotspots for animal interaction, shaping patterns of attraction and avoidance. Where sleeping sites are shared, individuals balance the opportunity for interaction with new social partners against their need for sleep. By expanding the network of connections within animal populations, such night-time social interactions may have important, yet largely unexplored, impacts on critical behavioural and ecological processes. Here, using GPS and tri-axial accelerometry to track the movements and sleeping patterns of wild olive baboon groups (Papio anubis), we show that sharing sleeping sites disrupts sleep but appears to catalyse social tolerance and coordinated movement between groups. Individual baboons experienced shorter and more fragmented sleep when groups shared a sleeping site. After sharing sleeping sites, however, otherwise independent groups showed a strong pattern of spatial attraction, moving cohesively for up to 3 days. Our findings highlight the influence of night-time social interactions on daytime social relationships and demonstrate how a population's reliance on, and need to share, limiting resources can drive the emergence of intergroup tolerance.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
502
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Proceedings B is the Royal Society’s flagship biological research journal, accepting original articles and reviews of outstanding scientific importance and broad general interest. The main criteria for acceptance are that a study is novel, and has general significance to biologists. Articles published cover a wide range of areas within the biological sciences, many have relevance to organisms and the environments in which they live. The scope includes, but is not limited to, ecology, evolution, behavior, health and disease epidemiology, neuroscience and cognition, behavioral genetics, development, biomechanics, paleontology, comparative biology, molecular ecology and evolution, and global change biology.
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