Dominant Individuals (dominant + individual)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Vocal Coordination of Group Movement by Green Woodhoopoes (Phoeniculus purpureus)

ETHOLOGY, Issue 1 2004
A. N. Radford
Communication signals are used by many species to maintain group cohesion when moving over larger areas. Groups of green woodhoopoes (Phoeniculus purpureus) generally move around their territory as a close-knit unit. Dominant individuals were more likely than subordinates to initiate movement to a new foraging site, but there was no intersexual difference. Dominants were also more likely than subordinates to be followed immediately. Vocalizations were shown to play an important role in mobilization: in the thick forests inhabited by woodhoopoes, visual cues to coordinate movement are likely to be less successful. When responding to the rallying call of a neighboring group, dominants and subordinates were equally likely to lead, as were males and females. As other group members followed immediately on most of these occasions, vocalizations were less important in this context than when moving to a new foraging site. [source]


The effect of dominance rank on fat deposition and food hoarding in the Willow Tit Parus montanus, an experimental test

IBIS, Issue 1 2003
Ken Lundborg
We studied the effects of dominance rank on fat deposition and hoarding behaviour in Willow Tits Parus montanus. Dominant individuals can displace subordinates which gives them priority to new food sources; they can also pilfer stored food from subordinates. This gives subordinates less certain access than dominants both to their own caches and to new food sources. Theory predicts that subordinates should invest more than dominants both in body fat reserves and stored food. Empirical evidence is equivocal; some studies have shown that subordinates built up larger reserves than dominants, whereas others show the opposite. In an earlier indoor experiment, Pravosudov and Lucas found no effect of rank on either hoarding rate or fat reserves, but the experimental design was such that the results were ambiguous. This paper reports on a similar, but improved, experiment in outdoor aviaries. However, our results agree with the earlier experiment, since we found no effect of rank on either food storing or fat deposition. The reasons for this are explored. [source]


Impact of Environmental Disturbance on the Stability and Benefits of Individual Status within Dominance Hierarchies

ETHOLOGY, Issue 5 2006
Lynne U. Sneddon
Changes in environmental conditions affect social interactions and thus may modify an individual's competitive ability within a social group. We subjected three-spined sticklebacks, Gasterosteus aculeatus, housed in groups of four individuals, to environmental perturbations to assess the impact on dominance hierarchy stability. Hierarchy stability decreased during increased turbulence or lowered water levels (,simulated drought') whereas control hierarchies became more stable in a constant environment. The dominant individual either became more aggressive and remained dominant during the environmental manipulation or was usurped by a lower rank member. Only simulated drought affected rates of aggression where levels of aggression were higher after the water level was dropped which may be the result of an increased encounter rate in these conditions. When there were large size differences between the group members, the dominant individual performed the greatest amount of aggression and ate the largest proportion of food and there was little aggressive behaviour from the lower ranks. In groups of similar-sized individuals, aggression was much higher. The benefit of being dominant was to gain weight over the experimental period whereas ranks 2 and 3 lost weight. The lowest rank, 4, actually gained weight over the experimental period. This study suggests that it would benefit an individual to be dominant, highly aggressive and gain weight or be submissive, avoid aggressive interactions and, by sneakily obtaining access to food, also gain weight. Altering environmental conditions has a profound effect on social behaviour in this study. [source]


Changes in individual and group spatial and verbal learning characteristics after anterior temporal lobectomy

EPILEPSIA, Issue 6 2009
Mario F. Dulay
Summary Purpose:, To evaluate the effects of anterior temporal lobectomy (ATL) on individual and group spatial and verbal learning and memory abilities as a function of side of surgery and seizure control outcome. Methods:, We evaluated pre- and postsurgical learning and memory abilities of 75 left-hemisphere language dominant individuals who underwent ATL (33 left, 42 right) using the 8-trial Nonverbal Selective Reminding test and the 12-trial Verbal Selective Reminding test. Results:, Reliable change index methods indicated that 40.5% of individuals who underwent right-ATL had a clinically significant decline in spatial memory, and 62.5% of individuals who underwent left-ATL had a significant reduction in verbal memory. Growth curve analyses indicated that both side of surgery and poor seizure outcome independently affected the learning slope in the best fitting models. Left-ATL reduced the slope, but did not affect the overall shape, of verbal learning across trials. On the other hand, poor seizure control outcome affected the slope of spatial learning regardless of the side of surgery. Discussion:, Results demonstrate both individual and group declines in spatial memory and learning after ATL. Results suggest that individuals who undergo right-ATL should be counseled regarding the likelihood of a decline in spatial memory and learning abilities after ATL. Results also suggest that individuals with poor seizure control after ATL should be referred for rehabilitation services given the significant declines in spatial and verbal memory that occurred in our sample regardless of side of surgery. [source]


Models of reproductive skew: A review and synthesis (Invited Article)

ETHOLOGY, Issue 1 2000
Rufus A. Johnstone
Animal societies vary markedly in reproductive skew, the extent to which breeding is monopolised by dominant individuals. In the last few years, a large number of different models have been developed to explain this variation. Here, I review existing models of reproductive skew, distinguishing between two basic types. Transactional models focus on group stability and the constraints this places on the division of reproduction. Compromise models, by contrast, ignore issues of group stability and view the division of reproduction as the outcome of a conflict in which each group member has a limited or partial ability to enforce its own optimum. I go on to show, however, that the division between transactional and compromise models is somewhat artificial, and that both approaches may be combined in a single, synthetic treatment. Different models of reproductive skew are thus better seen as special cases of a general underlying theory, rather than alternative paradigms. I conclude with a brief discussion of the possibilities and problems of empirically testing this unified theory of skew, and the prospects for future theoretical advances. [source]


Effects of elevated CO2 on the size structure in even-aged monospecific stands of Chenopodium album

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 4 2003
HISAE NAGASHIMA
Abstract To investigate the effect of elevated CO2 on the size inequality and size structure, even-aged monospecific stands of an annual, Chenopodium album, were established at ambient and doubled CO2 with high and low nutrient availabilities in open top chambers. The growth of individual plants was monitored non-destructively every week until flowering. Elevated CO2 significantly enhanced plant growth at high nutrients, but did not at low nutrients. The size inequality expressed as the coefficient of variation tended to increase at elevated CO2. Size structure of the stands was analyzed by the cumulative frequency distribution of plant size. At early stages of plant growth, CO2 elevation benefited all individuals and shifted the whole size distribution of the stand to large size classes. At later stages, dominant individuals were still larger at elevated than at ambient CO2, but the difference in small subordinate individuals between two CO2 levels became smaller. Although these tendencies were found at both nutrient availabilities, difference in size distribution between CO2 levels was larger at high nutrients. The CO2 elevation did not significantly enhance the growth rate as a function of plant size except for the high nutrient stand at the earliest stage, indicating that the higher biomass at elevated CO2 at later stages in the high nutrient stand was caused by the larger size of individuals at the earliest stage. Thus the effect of elevated CO2 on stand structure and size inequality strongly depended on the growth stage and nutrient availabilities. [source]


Long-range call use in dominance-structured Crested Tit Parus cristatus winter groups

JOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2000
Indri?is Krams
In this study on free-ranging Crested Tits Parus cristatus, I examine the relationship between social dominance and the frequency of use of long-range communication calls. Calling rates of trills were highest among socially dominant individuals and they gave more calls when close to the boundary of their territories. Dominant females uttered fewer calls than their mates. However, they gave significantly more calls than subordinate males and subordinate females, the latter calling least. A removal and playback experiment revealed a relationship between the utterance of trilled calls and the defence of the winter territory in the Crested Tit. Although territorial vocalizations could incur costs, territorial individuals may gain from improved winter survival by decreasing the risk of food stealing by Crested Tits from adjacent territories. [source]


Social Stress Alters Expression of Large Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel Subunits in Mouse Adrenal Medulla and Pituitary Glands

JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, Issue 3 2009
O. Chatterjee
Large conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels are very prominently expressed in adrenal chromaffin and many anterior pituitary cells, where they shape intrinsic excitability complexly. Stress- and sex-steroids regulate alternative splicing of Slo-,, the pore-forming subunit of BK channels, and chronic behavioural stress has been shown to alter Slo splicing in tree shrew adrenals. In the present study, we focus on mice, measuring the effects of chronic behavioural stress on total mRNA expression of the Slo-, gene, two key BK channel , subunit genes (,2 and ,4), and the ,STREX' splice variant of Slo-,. As a chronic stressor, males of the relatively aggressive SJL strain were housed with a different unfamiliar SJL male every 24 h for 19 days. This ,social-instability' paradigm stressed all individuals, as demonstrated by reduced weight gain and elevated corticosterone levels. Five quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain assays were performed in parallel, including ,-actin, each calibrated against a dilution series of its corresponding cDNA template. Stress-related changes in BK expression were larger in mice tested at 6 weeks than 9 weeks. In younger animals, Slo-, mRNA levels were elevated 44% and 116% in the adrenal medulla and pituitary, respectively, compared to individually-housed controls. ,2 and ,4 mRNAs were elevated 162% and 194% in the pituitary, but slightly reduced in the adrenals of stressed animals. In the pituitary, dominance scores of stressed animals correlated negatively with , and , subunit expression, with more subordinate individuals exhibiting levels that were three- to four-fold higher than controls or dominant individuals. STREX variant representation was lower in the subordinate subset. Thus, the combination of subunits responding to stress differs markedly between adrenal and pituitary glands. These data suggest that early stress will differentially affect neuroendocrine cell excitability, and call for detailed analysis of functional consequences. [source]


The relationship between social status and atherosclerosis in male and female monkeys as revealed by meta-analysis

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 9 2009
Jay R. Kaplan
Abstract More than 25 years ago our laboratory reported sex-dependent relationships between social status and coronary artery atherosclerosis among cholesterol-fed cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) maintained in social groups of four to six animals each. Dominant males developed more atherosclerosis than subordinates, but only if housed in recurrently reorganized social groups. In contrast, dominant females developed significantly less atherosclerosis than subordinates, irrespective of social setting. Although we have continued to study these associations, no confirmatory investigations have been reported by other laboratories or using other atherosclerosis-susceptible monkey species. Accordingly, we conducted a meta-analysis of all relevant data sources developed in our laboratory since 1982 to determine whether the originally reported relationships between social status and atherosclerosis reflected robust associations. The sentinel (first) studies were composed of 16 females and 27 males. The current meta-analysis encompassed 419 animals (200 females and 219 males) derived from 11 separate investigations. The results confirmed that, among males, dominant individuals developed more extensive atherosclerosis than subordinates when housed in recurrently reorganized (unstable) social groups in which an estrogen-implanted female was also present. Dominant males in stable social groups tended to have less atherosclerosis than similarly housed subordinates, but this effect was not significant. On the contrary, we found that dominant females developed reliably less atherosclerosis than subordinates. Am. J. Primatol. 71:732,741, 2009. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Assessing the spawning season in common dentex (Dentex dentex) using microsatellites

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 12 2008
Yaisel J Borrell
Abstract A set of five variable microsatellite markers was used for the genetic characterization of two common dentex (Dentex dentex) broodstocks from an experimental hatchery and for the screening of the egg batches spawned during the complete spawn season in 2006. After parentage assignment, simulations were performed for the hatchery 1 broodstocks; the microsatellite set correctly assigned over 93% of descendants to parents when one parent was known and 80% when neither parent was known. Of the 261 eggs that the DNA was correctly amplified from, 254 were successfully assigned to a parental couple. More than one female or male took part (at the same point in time) in the spawning season. However, we observed ,dominant' individuals that produced high proportions of the descendants (unequal reproductive success) in all the sampling periods, although the contributions of these dominant individuals could change over time. This phenomenon reduces the effective breeding numbers, and could lead to inbreeding if this factor is not taken into account when the next parental generation is obtained. This factor should also be considered in aquaculture selection programmes because the dominant breeders may not be the most interesting individuals for commercial or productive schemes. [source]


Lolium multiflorum density responses under ozone and herbicide stress

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, Issue 8 2009
M. ALEJANDRA MARTÍNEZ-GHERSA
Abstract Adaptations to overcrowding of individual plants result in density dependant control of growth and development. There is little information on how anthropogenic stresses modify these responses. We investigated whether combinations of diclofop-methyl herbicide and tropospheric ozone alter the pattern of expected growth compensation with density changes resulting from intraspecific competition in Lolium multiforum Lam (Poacea) plants. Individual plant vegetative parameters and total seed production were assessed for plants growing under various densities and different herbicide rates and ozone treatments. The stressors differently changed the frequency distribution for average individual plant weight resulting from increasing densities. Only herbicide affected seedling mortality. Plants were able to compensate during grain filling maintaining similar seed production , density relationships in all treatments. Our findings contribute to the understanding of the impact of stress factors on the demographic changes in plant populations. Important ecological implications arise: (i) contrasting responses to ozone and herbicide, alone and in combination of individual plants resulted in different biomass , density relationships; (ii) stress effects on plant populations could not be predicted from individual responses; and (iii) changes in competitive outcome by single or combined stress factors may alter the expected genotype frequency in a crowded population with few dominant individuals. [source]


Assessing the spawning season in common dentex (Dentex dentex) using microsatellites

AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, Issue 12 2008
Yaisel J Borrell
Abstract A set of five variable microsatellite markers was used for the genetic characterization of two common dentex (Dentex dentex) broodstocks from an experimental hatchery and for the screening of the egg batches spawned during the complete spawn season in 2006. After parentage assignment, simulations were performed for the hatchery 1 broodstocks; the microsatellite set correctly assigned over 93% of descendants to parents when one parent was known and 80% when neither parent was known. Of the 261 eggs that the DNA was correctly amplified from, 254 were successfully assigned to a parental couple. More than one female or male took part (at the same point in time) in the spawning season. However, we observed ,dominant' individuals that produced high proportions of the descendants (unequal reproductive success) in all the sampling periods, although the contributions of these dominant individuals could change over time. This phenomenon reduces the effective breeding numbers, and could lead to inbreeding if this factor is not taken into account when the next parental generation is obtained. This factor should also be considered in aquaculture selection programmes because the dominant breeders may not be the most interesting individuals for commercial or productive schemes. [source]