The combination of social and personal contexts affects dominance hierarchy development in shore crabs, Carcinus maenas
Authored by Andrew L Jackson, Colby J Tanner
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2011.09.004
Sponsors:
Irish Research Council
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Many animals that live in groups maintain competitive relationships, yet
avoid continual fighting, by forming dominance hierarchies. We compare
predictions of stochastic, individual-based models with empirical
experimental evidence using shore crabs to test competing hypotheses
regarding hierarchy development. The models test (1) what information
individuals use when deciding to fight or retreat, (2) how past
experience affects current resource-holding potential, and (3) how
individuals deal with changes to the social environment. First, we
conclude that crabs assess only their own state and not their opponent's
when deciding to fight or retreat. Second, willingness to enter, and
performance in, aggressive contests are influenced by previous contest
outcomes. Winning increases the likelihood of both fighting and winning
future interactions, while losing has the opposite effect. Third, when
groups with established dominance hierarchies dissolve and new groups
form, individuals reassess their ranks, showing no memory of previous
rank or group affiliation. With every change in group composition, individuals fight for their new ranks. This iterative process carries
over as groups dissolve and form, which has important implications for
the relationship between ability and hierarchy rank. We conclude that
dominance hierarchies emerge through an interaction of individual and
social factors, and discuss these findings in terms of an underlying
mechanism. Overall, our results are consistent with crabs using a
cumulative assessment strategy iterated across changes in group
composition, in which aggression is constrained by an absolute threshold
in energy spent and damage received while fighting. (C) 2011 The
Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier
Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Evolution
Experience
Body-size
Mating success
Male-male contests
Fighting behavior
Assessment strategy
Animal contests
Self-assessment
Winner