Why wait to mark? Possible reasons behind latency from olfactory exploration to overmarking in four African equid species.

Anim Cogn

Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University, Campus Delivery 1499, Fort Collins, USA.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the time intervals between a sender's elimination of an olfactory signal and a receiver's response (sniffing and overmarking) in four species of African equids, focusing on factors like age and sex.
  • Results indicated that the time between elimination and overmarking was shorter among female friends and parent-offspring pairs, supporting the social bond hypothesis, while intraspecific time variations did not correlate with species social organization, challenging the group cohesion hypothesis.
  • The findings also showed that males were more drawn to sniffing eliminations than females, and that younger foals sniffed eliminations faster but spent more time sniffing in larger groups, suggesting the motivations behind olfactory exploration might differ from those for

Article Abstract

Whereas most studies on overmarking in mammals analysed the rate of overmarking, that those investigate time between exploration of an olfactory stimulus and the response to it remain less common, with inconsistent results. We examined the latency in time between elimination by the sender and sniffing by the receiver, and from sniffing and overmarking, in four captive African equid species to explore differences among species, and among age and sex classes. We investigated these latency time periods in light of three potential hypotheses explaining overmarking behaviour in equids: social bonds, group cohesion, and intrasexual competition. Analysing 1684 events of sniffing and 719 of overmarking among 130 individuals, we found that (i) the time from elimination to overmarking was shorter among female friends and in parent-offspring dyads, proving support to the social bond hypothesis; (ii) intraspecific differences in time periods do not reflect the social organisation of species, thus not supporting the group cohesion hypothesis; (iii) males were more attracted to elimination of conspecifics than females, and female's eliminations were inspected longer, in line with the sexual competition hypothesis and/or reproductive behaviour. In addition, we found that the younger foals came to sniff eliminations faster than older ones, and in larger groups foals devoted longer time to sniffing the elimination before overmarking. We concluded that examination of the elimination could be driven by motivations other than the decision to overmark. Whereas overmarking serves to express bonds to a familiar individual, the latency of overmarking reflects more reproductive interests.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10071-022-01625-5DOI Listing

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