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Individual Variation in the Antisnake Behavior of California Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus beecheyi)
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Individual Variation in the Antisnake Behavior of California Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus beecheyi)

著者: Richard G Coss; James E Biardi
版本/格式: 文章 文章 : 英语
刊登在:Journal of Mammalogy, May, 1997, vol. 78, no. 2, p. 294-310
数据库:JSTOR
其它数据库: ArticleFirstBritish Library Serials
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文件类型: 文章
所有的著者/提供者: Richard G Coss; James E Biardi
ISSN:0022-2372
OCLC号码: 481771897
语言注释: English
注意: Fig. 3.-Factor structure of the first four canonical correlations for snake-selected ground squirrels during presentations of a rattlesnake or gopher snake. Inset numbers represent varimax-rotated weights, which are the correlations of the univariate measures with the composite antisnake behavior toward the gopher snake (left) and rattlesnake (right). Note that factor 4 is composed exclusively of the physiological arousal measure (tail piloerection), which does not contribute to the first three correlations.
Fig. 4.-Factor structure of the first two canonical correlations for relax-selected ground squirrels during presentations of a rattlesnake or gopher snake. Inset numbers represent varimax-rotated weights. Compared with Fig. 3, the canonical composites have much simpler factor structure that might reflect disintegration of organized antisnake behavior with prolonged relaxed selection. In this group, tail piloerection is not isolated from investigative behavior (factor 2).
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摘要:

California ground squirrels (Spermophilus beecheyi) have evolved behavioral defenses against their two predators, the northern Pacific rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis oreganus) and Pacific gopher snake (Pituophis melanoleucus catenifer). Two studies were used to examine individual variation in antisnake behavior as it might be affected by selection operating on arousability, fearfulness, and aggressiveness. In Study 1 the behavioral consistency of two litters of lab-reared juveniles was examined at two age periods during encounters with a caged gopher snake and domestic cat. Close-range investigation and tail flagging appeared to be governed by short-term motivational states that were not strongly correlated across age. Age correlations revealed that individual tendencies to throw substrate were relatively consistent for the snake and even more so for the cat. In Study 2, wild-caught adults were obtained from five sites where rattlesnakes and gopher snakes were abundant and from five sites where these snakes were rare or absent. Squirrels in a seminatural laboratory setting were given balanced presentations of a caged rattlesnake and gopher snake separated by 5 days. Snakes were recognized by all squirrels as potentially dangerous, irrespective of experience, age, and selective regime. Substrate throwing also was positively correlated for the two snakes in both groups of adults, indicating that level of aggressiveness is a consistent component of temperament not specific to species of snakes. Physiological arousal was not correlated strongly for the two snakes, but it was significantly lower in squirrels from sites where snakes were abundant. This suggests some specialization to reduce anxiety that possibly enhances tactical decision making.

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