Food limitation increases aggression in juvenile meerkats
Behavioral Ecology 20(5): 930-935
Article 2009 English
Authors
SH
Sarah J. Hodge
AT
Alex Thornton
TF
Tom P. Flower
Abstract
1 min read
Both the rate and severity of sibling aggression are predicted to be higher when food availability is low. Although there is now good evidence that food availability influences sibling aggression in facultatively siblicidal species, where aggression commonly results in the death of a competitor, little is known about the proximate causes of aggression in nonsiblicidal species, where aggression rarely results in serious injury. Here, we investigated patterns of aggression between juvenile meerkats (Suricata suricatta), a species where littermate aggression is common, but never lethal. We show that the frequency of aggression between littermates increased when rainfall and helper number, both predictors of the amount of food available to pups, were low. Short-term feeding experiments demonstrated that reducing pup hunger by provisioning them before a foraging session significantly reduced their frequency of aggression in comparison to unfed controls. There was no evidence that offspring sex or weight influenced either the rate at which pups were aggressive, or which littermates they were aggressive to. These results suggest that food availability is an important factor affecting the severity of aggressive competition between offspring, even in the absence of lethal aggressive attacks.
Ben Dantzer, Inês Braga Gonçalves, Helen Spence‐Jones, Nigel C. Bennett, Michael Heistermann, André Ganswindt, Constance Dubuc, David Gaynor, Marta B. Manser, Tim Clutton-brock
Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences
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