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Population growth and social structure of confined colonies of mongolian gerbils: Scent gland size and marking behaviour as indices of social status

 

作者: Heidi H. Swanson,   M. Ruth Lockley,  

 

期刊: Aggressive Behavior  (WILEY Available online 1978)
卷期: Volume 4, issue 1  

页码: 57-89

 

ISSN:0096-140X

 

年代: 1978

 

DOI:10.1002/1098-2337(1978)4:1<57::AID-AB2480040106>3.0.CO;2-8

 

出版商: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company

 

关键词: aggression;gerbil;marking behaviour;population control;scent gland

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

AbstractMale gerbils have larger ventral scent glands, and they mark more than females. In both sexes, scent gland activity is dependent on gonadal hormones. Observations on colonies of gerbils, living in enclosures or cages, showed that both scent gland size and marking behaviour were related to social status. In colonies founded by a single pair, breeding was confined to the original female. The infertility of the daughters was due to failure of sexual maturation. As this was always associated with a lack of development of the scent glands, the functional state of the latter could be used as an index of fecundity. A change in social organization (eg removal of the parents) caused previously infertile females to conceive and was accompanied by development of the scent glands If there was competition for dominance, the scent glands of the losers regressed; at autopsy, their ovaries and uteri appeared to be nonfunctional. The founding father usually had a larger scent gland than his sons, but the inhibition of sexual function was not as severe as in the females. However, the father characteristically showed much more marking behaviow in a neutral territory than his sons. None of the fem ales‐except the mother‐showed appreciable marking, and her scores were much lower than those of the dominant male. Asymptotic populations were reached at about the same level in enclosures and cages, implicating an intrinsic capacity for control independent of the number of animals per unit of space but probably related to the natural size of a social group. Stabilization of numbers was achieved not only by reproductive inhibition of young females, but also by cessation of breeding by the founding mother and death of litters. Littermates raised in enclosures without their parents showed delayed sexual maturation accompanied by fighting which resulted in the formation of a hierarchy headed by a breeding female and a dominant (marking) m

 

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