Vocalization during agonistic encounter in Mongolian gerbils: Impact of sexual experience

Behaviors and vocalizations associated with aggression are essential for animals to survive, reproduce, and organize social hierarchy. Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) are highly aggressive and frequently emit calls. We took advantage of these features to study the relationship between voca...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2022-08, Vol.17 (8), p.e0272402-e0272402
Hauptverfasser: Furuyama, Takafumi, Shigeyama, Takafumi, Ono, Munenori, Yamaki, Sachiko, Kobayasi, Kohta I, Kato, Nobuo, Yamamoto, Ryo
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container_start_page e0272402
container_title PloS one
container_volume 17
creator Furuyama, Takafumi
Shigeyama, Takafumi
Ono, Munenori
Yamaki, Sachiko
Kobayasi, Kohta I
Kato, Nobuo
Yamamoto, Ryo
description Behaviors and vocalizations associated with aggression are essential for animals to survive, reproduce, and organize social hierarchy. Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) are highly aggressive and frequently emit calls. We took advantage of these features to study the relationship between vocalizations and aggressive behaviors in virgin and sexually experienced male and female Mongolian gerbils through the same-sex resident-intruder test. Both sexes of resident gerbils exhibited aggressive responses toward intruders. Multiparous females exhibited the most aggressive responses among the four groups. We also confirmed two groups of vocalizations during the encounters: high-frequency (>24.6 kHz) and low-frequency (
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Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) are highly aggressive and frequently emit calls. We took advantage of these features to study the relationship between vocalizations and aggressive behaviors in virgin and sexually experienced male and female Mongolian gerbils through the same-sex resident-intruder test. Both sexes of resident gerbils exhibited aggressive responses toward intruders. Multiparous females exhibited the most aggressive responses among the four groups. We also confirmed two groups of vocalizations during the encounters: high-frequency (&gt;24.6 kHz) and low-frequency (&lt;24.6 kHz). At the timing of high-frequency vocalizations observed during the tests, the vast majority (96.2%) of the behavioral interactions were non-agonistic. While, at the timing of low-frequency vocalizations observed during the tests, around half (45%) of the behavioral interactions were agonistic. 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subjects Aggressive behavior
Aggressiveness
Aggressiveness (Psychology)
Analysis
Animal behavior
Behavior
Biology and Life Sciences
Females
Gerbils
Laboratory animals
Males
Meriones unguiculatus
Research and Analysis Methods
Rodents
Sex
Sexes
Sexual behavior
Social hierarchy
Social Sciences
Sound
Vocalization behavior
title Vocalization during agonistic encounter in Mongolian gerbils: Impact of sexual experience
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