Are cleaner fish, Labroides dimidiatus, inequity averse?

Inequity aversion (IA), a willingness to incur temporary costs to prevent unequal outcomes, is common in humans and thought to be beneficial in the context of cooperative relationships with nonkin, since it might allow individuals to regulate contributions to cooperative activities. Attempts to addr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animal behaviour 2012-09, Vol.84 (3), p.665-674
Hauptverfasser: Raihani, N.J., McAuliffe, K., Brosnan, S.F., Bshary, R.
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container_issue 3
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container_title Animal behaviour
container_volume 84
creator Raihani, N.J.
McAuliffe, K.
Brosnan, S.F.
Bshary, R.
description Inequity aversion (IA), a willingness to incur temporary costs to prevent unequal outcomes, is common in humans and thought to be beneficial in the context of cooperative relationships with nonkin, since it might allow individuals to regulate contributions to cooperative activities. Attempts to address whether nonhuman animals also show IA have produced mixed results: some studies found that cooperative species are more likely to show IA while others did not. This ambiguity may arise because animals are typically tested for an aversion to working for differential food rewards, even though most tested species do not regularly cooperate to access food. We used the interspecific mutualism between cleaner fish and their reef-fish ‘clients’ to investigate whether IA exists in a species that regularly cooperates with unrelated individuals in the food domain. Cleaners were tested in pairs of actors and recipients. Actors had to perform a task to provide a food reward to both actor and recipient. Cleaners show consistent food preferences in the wild and under laboratory conditions, allowing us to vary the value of the food reward offered to actor and recipient to test whether actors were less likely to work when recipients received higher value rewards. We performed two experiments: actors worked either for their opposite-sex partner or for a same-sex competitor. We found no evidence that cleaners were sensitive to inequity: actors were equally likely to perform the task in all experimental conditions. We discuss these results in light of theories of the evolution of IA. ► Cleaner fish Labroides dimidiatus regularly cooperate with conspecifics for food. ► We investigate whether cleaner fish are inequity averse using a novel task. ► Cleaner fish were trained to work for food for themselves and a partner. ► Food rewards were varied to produce equitable and inequitable outcomes. ► We found no evidence for inequity aversion in cleaner fish.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.anbehav.2012.06.023
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subjects animal behavior
cleaner fish
cooperation
Diet
Evolution
Experiments
fairness
Fish
food choices
humans
inequity aversion
Labroides
Labroides dimidiatus
mutualism
Nonnative species
nutritive value
punishment
Symbiosis
title Are cleaner fish, Labroides dimidiatus, inequity averse?
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