Isolation rearing does not constrain social plasticity in a family-living lizard

Loner lizards can become savvy socialites. An animal’s social experience while growing up often influences how they interact socially, and it may also constrain their ability to adapt to dynamic social situations. Yet, we find that in the tree skink, a family-living lizard, social plasticity is not...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral ecology 2018-05, Vol.29 (3), p.563-573
Hauptverfasser: Riley, Julia L, Guidou, Côme, Fryns, Caroline, Mourier, Johann, Leu, Stephan T, Noble, Daniel W A, Byrne, Richard W, Whiting, Martin J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Loner lizards can become savvy socialites. An animal’s social experience while growing up often influences how they interact socially, and it may also constrain their ability to adapt to dynamic social situations. Yet, we find that in the tree skink, a family-living lizard, social plasticity is not limited by their social experience during development. The tree skink has a variable social system, which may enable it to adapt to dynamic social situations. Abstract An animal’s social environment can be both dynamic and complex. Thus, social species often garner fitness benefits through being plastic in their social behavior. Yet, social plasticity can be constrained by an individual’s experience. We examined the influence of early social environment on social behavior in the tree skink (Egernia striolata), a family-living lizard. In the first phase of this study, we reared juveniles in 2 different social environments for 1.5 years: either in isolation or in unrelated pairs. We quantified each lizard’s sociability at 4-month intervals using a standardized laboratory assay and found that isolated lizards were more sociable, spending the assay closer to an adult female, than socially-reared lizards. In the second phase of this study (at the end of 1.5 years), we released all lizards into a semi-natural environment, observed their associations, and used social network analysis to quantify social behavior. During the initial 6 weeks post-release, we detected no differences in social behavior between rearing treatments. However, during the following 6 months differences emerged. Isolated lizards were more homogeneous in the strength of their associations than socially-reared lizards. Also, at first, isolated lizards associated more strongly than socially-reared lizards. Over time, isolated lizard associations became weaker and involved fewer lizards. In contrast, the level and number of associations of socially-reared lizards were stable over time. Our findings suggest that early experience influences tree skink social behavior but does not constrain social plasticity: isolation rearing did not limit their ability to respond to a novel social environment.
ISSN:1045-2249
1465-7279
DOI:10.1093/beheco/ary007