Authors
Isaac Y Ligocki, Adam R Reddon, Jennifer K Hellmann, Constance M O’Connor, Susan Marsh-Rollo, Sigal Balshine, Ian M Hamilton
Publication date
2015/1/1
Journal
Behaviour
Volume
152
Issue
12-13
Pages
1821-1839
Publisher
Brill
Description
In group living animals, individuals may visit other groups. The costs and benefits of such visits for the members of a group will depend on the attributes and intentions of the visitor, and the social status of responding group members. Using wild groups of the cooperatively breeding cichlid fish ( Neolamprologus pulcher ), we compared group member responses to unfamiliar ‘visiting’ conspecifics in control groups and in experimentally manipulated groups from which a subordinate the same size and sex as the visitor was removed. High-ranking fish were less aggressive towards visitors in removal groups than in control groups; low-ranking subordinates were more aggressive in the removal treatment. High-ranking females and subordinates the same size and sex as the visitor responded most aggressively toward the visitor in control groups. These results suggest that visitors are perceived as …
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