Size matters: Natural experiments suggest the dear enemy effect is moderated by pack size in African wild dogs

Author:

Claase Megan J.12ORCID,Cherry Mike I.1,McNutt J. Weldon2,Apps Peter J.23,Jordan Neil R.245

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany & Zoology Stellenbosch University Matieland South Africa

2. Botswana Predator Conservation, Wild Entrust Africa Maun Botswana

3. Department of Zoology Nelson Mandela University Port Elizabeth South Africa

4. Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney New South Wales Australia

5. Taronga Institute of Science and Learning, Taronga Western Plains Zoo, Taronga Conservation Society Dubbo New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractRemote monitoring of communal marking sites, or latrines, provides a unique opportunity to observe undisturbed scent marking behaviour of African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus). We used remote camera trap observations in a natural experiment to test behavioural scent mark responses to rivals (either familiar neighbours or unfamiliar strangers), to determine whether wild dogs exhibit the “dear enemy” or “nasty neighbour” response. Given that larger groups of wild dogs represent a greater threat to smaller groups, including for established residents, we predicted that the overarching categories “dear enemy” vs. “nasty neighbour” may be confounded by varying social statuses that exists between individual dyads interacting. Using the number of overmarks as a metric, results revealed an interaction between sender and receiver group size irrespective of familiarity consistent with this prediction: in general, individuals from large resident packs overmarked large groups more than they overmarked smaller groups, whereas individuals from smaller packs avoided overmarking larger groups, possibly to avoid detection. Monitoring a natural system highlights variables such as pack size that may be either overlooked or controlled during scent presentation experiments, influencing our ability to gain insights into the factors determining territorial responses to rivals.

Publisher

Wiley

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