Pre-adult aggression and its long-term behavioural consequences in crickets

Social experience, particularly aggression, is considered a major determinant of consistent inter-individual behavioural differences between animals of the same species and sex. We investigated the influence of pre-adult aggressive experience on future behaviour in male, last instar nymphs of the cr...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-03, Vol.15 (3), p.e0230743-e0230743
Hauptverfasser: Balsam, Julia S, Stevenson, Paul A
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description Social experience, particularly aggression, is considered a major determinant of consistent inter-individual behavioural differences between animals of the same species and sex. We investigated the influence of pre-adult aggressive experience on future behaviour in male, last instar nymphs of the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus. We found that aggressive interactions between male nymphs are far less fierce than for adults in terms of duration and escalation. This appears to reflect immaturity of the sensory apparatus for releasing aggression, rather than the motor system controlling it. First, a comparison of the behavioural responses of nymphs and adults to mechanical antennal stimulation using freshly excised, untreated and hexane-washed antennae taken from nymphs and adults, indicate that nymphs neither respond to nor produce sex-specific cuticular semiochemicals important for releasing aggressive behaviour in adults. Second, treatment with the octopamine agonist chlordimeform could at least partially compensate for this deficit. In further contrast to adults, which become hyper-aggressive after victory, but submissive after defeat, such winner and loser effects are not apparent in nymphs. Aggressive competition between nymphs thus appears to have no consequence for future behaviour in crickets. Male nymphs are often attacked by adult males, but not by adult females. Furthermore, observations of nymphs raised in the presence, or absence of adult males, revealed that social subjugation by adult males leads to reduced aggressiveness and depressed exploratory behaviour when the nymphs become adult. We conclude that social subjugation by adults during pre-adult development of nymphs is a major determinant of consistent inter-individual behavioural differences in adult crickets.
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subjects Adults
Aggression
Aggressive behavior
Aggressiveness
Animal behavior
Antennae
Antennas (Electronics)
Biology and Life Sciences
Comparative analysis
Competition
Crickets
Datasets
Engineering and Technology
Evaluation
Experiments
Exploratory behavior
Food
Influence
Invertebrates
Laboratory animals
Life sciences
Light
Males
Medicine and Health Sciences
Octopamine
People and Places
Semiochemicals
Sex
Sexual behavior
Social Sciences
title Pre-adult aggression and its long-term behavioural consequences in crickets
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