Individuality, species-specific features, and female discrimination of male southern white rhinoceros courtship calls
Jazyk angličtina Země Německo Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
Grantová podpora
114622
National Research Foundation
IGA_PrF_2017_023
Internal Grant Agency, Palacky University Olomouc
IGA_PrF_2018_026
Internal Grant Agency, Palacky University Olomouc
PubMed
35015220
DOI
10.1007/s10071-021-01591-4
PII: 10.1007/s10071-021-01591-4
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- Female mate choice, Individuality, Northern white rhino, Southern white rhino, Species differences, Vocal communication,
- MeSH
- druhová specificita MeSH
- individualita * MeSH
- námluvy * MeSH
- Perissodactyla MeSH
- rozmnožování MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- mužské pohlaví MeSH
- ženské pohlaví MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
Male vocalizations associated with courtship can play a key role in mate selection. They may help females obtain information about males' quality and identity and/or may contain species-specific properties that help prevent interspecies breeding. Despite vocalizations being a prominent part of the courtship of white rhinos, the role that they play in white rhino breeding behaviour has not been extensively studied. Both southern (SWR) and critically endangered northern white rhino (NWR) males intensively vocalize during courtship with hic calls. We examined these calls and found that call properties differed between NWR and SWR males. In addition, we found that individual SWR males could be identified with a high degree of accuracy using their hic calls and that the signature information capacity in hic calls would allow females to individually recognize about 11 adult males living in or moving through their home-ranges, which may help with mate selection. Then, we conducted playback experiments with wild anoestrus SWR females. The females discriminated between the NWR and SWR hic calls and between the SWR hic and SWR pant calls. However, we only found differences in the latency of observed behaviours, not in their duration or in the intensity of females' reaction. This might suggest that females which are not in oestrus are not highly responsive to a male's motivation (i.e., seeking contact or mating), but are more interested in assessing his dominance status or familiarity. Ultimately, our results indicate that courtship hic calls encode information which might help females choose mating partners.
Zobrazit více v PubMed
Arnold BD, Wilkinson GS (2011) Individual specific contact calls of pallid bats (Antrozous pallidus) attract conspecifics at roosting sites. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 65:1581–1593 DOI
ASAB/ABS (2017) Guidelines for the treatment of animals in behavioural research and teaching. Anim Behav 123:1–2 DOI
Beecher MD (1982) Signature Systems and Kin Recognition. Am Zool 22:477–490 DOI
Beecher MD (1989) Signalling systems for individual recognition: an information theory approach. Anim Behav 38:248–261 DOI
Benson-Amram S, Heinen VK, Dryer SL, Holekamp KE (2011) Numerical assessment and individual call discrimination by wild spotted hyenas, Crocuta crocuta. Anim Behav 82:743–752 DOI
Bradbury JW, Vehrencamp SL (1998) Principles of animal communication. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland
Briefer EF (2012) Vocal expression of emotions in mammals: mechanisms of production and evidence. J Zool 288:1–20 DOI
Brown MT, Wicker LR (2000) Discriminant analysis. In: Brown SD, Tinsley HEA (eds) Handbook of applied multivariate statistics and mathematical modelling. Academic Press, Hoboken, pp 209–235 DOI
Carter GG, Logsdon R, Arnold BD, Menchaca A, Medellin RA (2012) Adult vampire bats produce contact calls when isolated: acoustic variation by species, population, colony, and individual. PLoS ONE 7:e38791 PubMed DOI PMC
Cinková I, Policht R (2014) Contact Calls of the Northern and Southern White Rhinoceros Allow for Individual and Species Identification. PLoS ONE 9:e98475 PubMed DOI PMC
Cinková I, Policht R (2016) Sex and species recognition by wild male southern white rhinoceros using contact pant calls. Anim Cogn 19:375–386 PubMed DOI
Cinková I, Shrader AM (2020) Rival assessment by territorial southern white rhinoceros males via eavesdropping on the contact and courtship calls. Anim Behav 166:19–31 DOI
Emslie RH, Milliken T, Talukdar B, Burgess G, Adcock K, Balfour D, Knight MH (2019) African and Asian Rhinoceroses—Status, Conservation and Trade. A report from the IUCN Species Survival Commission (IUCN SSC) African and Asian Rhino Specialist Groups and TRAFFIC to the CITES Secretariat pursuant to Resolution Conf. 9.14 (Rev. CoP17). In: Report to CITES 17th meeting (Colombo, June 2019), CoP 18 Doc.83.1 annex 3:1–38
Groves CP, Fernando P, Robovský J (2010) The sixth rhino: a taxonomic re-assessment of the critically endangered northern white rhinoceros. PLoS ONE 5:e9703 PubMed DOI PMC
Groves CP, Cotterill FPD, Gippoliti S, Robovský J, Roos C, Taylor PJ, Zinner D (2017) Species definitions and conservation: a review and case studies from African mammals. Conserv Genet 18:1247–1256 DOI
Hermes R, Hildebrandt TB, Blottner S, Walzer C, Silinski S, Patton ML, Wibbelt G, Schwarzenberger F, Göritz F (2005) Reproductive soundness of captive southern and northern white rhinoceroses (Ceratotherium simum simum, C. s. cottoni): evaluation of male genital tract morphology and semen quality before and after cryopreservation. Theriogenology 63:219–238 PubMed DOI
Hermes R, Hildebrandt TB, Walzer C, Göritz F, Patton ML, Silinski S, Anderson MJ, Reid CE, Wibbelt G, Tomasova K, Schwarzenberger F (2006) The effect of long non-reproductive periods on the genital health in captive female white rhinoceroses (Ceratotherium simum simum, C. s. cottoni). Theriogenology 65:1492–1515 PubMed DOI
Hillman-Smith KM, Oyisenzoo M, Smith F (1986) A last chance to save the northern white rhinoceros Ceratotherium simum cottoni. Oryx 20:20–26 DOI
Knight M (2011) African Rhino specialist group report. Pachyderm 49:6–15
Kondo N, Watanabe S (2009) Contact calls: information and social function. Jpn Psychol Res 51:197–208 DOI
Kretzschmar P, Auld H, Boag P, Gansloßer U, Scott C, van Coeverden de Groot PJ, Courtiol A (2020) Mate choice, reproductive success and inbreeding in white rhinoceros: new insights for conservation management. Evol Appl 13:699–714 PubMed DOI
Leliveld LM, Scheumann M, Zimmermann E (2011) Acoustic correlates of individuality in the vocal repertoire of a nocturnal primate (Microcebus murinus). J Acoust Soc Am 129:2278–2288 PubMed DOI
Lindburg DG, Fitch-Snyder H (1994) Use of behavior to evaluate reproductive problems in captive mammals. Zoo Biol 13:433–445 DOI
Linhart P, Osiejuk TS, Budka M, Šálek M, Špinka M, Policht R, Syrová M, Blumstein DT (2019) Measuring individual identity information in animal signals: overview and performance of available identity metrics. Methods Ecol Evol 10:1558–1570 DOI
Linn SN, Schmidt S, Scheumann M (2021) Individual distinctiveness across call types of the southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum simum). J Mammal 102:440–456 PubMed DOI PMC
Marneweck C, Jürgens A, Shrader AM (2018) Ritualised dung kicking by white rhino males amplifies olfactory signals but reduces odour duration. J Chem Ecol 44:875–885 PubMed DOI
McElligott AG, Hayden TJ (1999) Context-related vocalization rates of fallow bucks, Dama dama. Anim Behav 58:1095–1104 PubMed DOI
McGregor PK, Catchpole CK, Dabelsteen T, Falls JB, Fusani L, Gerhard C, Gilbert F, Horn AG, Klump GM, Kroodsma DE, Lambrechts MM, McComb KE, Nelson DA, Pepperberg IM, Ratcliffe L, Searcy WA, Weary DM (1992) Design of playback experiments: the Thornbridge Hall NATO ARW consensus. In: McGregor PK (ed) Playback and studies of animal communication. Plenum, New York, pp 1–9 DOI
Moodley Y, Russo IRM, Robovský J, Dalton DL, Kotzé A, Smith S, Stejskal J, Ryder OA, Hermes R, Walzer C, Bruford MW (2018) Contrasting evolutionary history, anthropogenic declines and genetic contact in the northern and southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum). Proc Biol Sci 285:20181567 PubMed PMC
Mundry R, Sommer C (2007) Discriminant function analysis with nonindependent data: consequences and an alternative. Anim Behav 74:965–976 DOI
Nieder A, Mooney R (2019) The neurobiology of innate, volitional and learned vocalizations in mammals and birds. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci B 375:20190054 DOI
Ord TJ, Stamps JA (2009) Species identity cues in animal communication. Am Nat 174:585–593 PubMed DOI
Owen-Smith RN (1973) The behavioural ecology of the white rhinoceros. Dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Policht R, Tomášová K, Holečková D, Frynta D (2008) The vocal repertoire in northern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum cottoni) as recorded in the last surviving herd. Bioacoustics 18:69–96 DOI
Reby D, Joachim J, Lauga J, Lek S, Aulagnier S (1998) Individuality in the groans of fallow deer (Dama dama) bucks. J Zool 245:79–84 DOI
Saragusty J, Diecke S, Drukker M, Durrant B, Ben-Nun IF, Galli C, Göritz F, Hayashi K, Hermes R, Holtze S, Johnson S, Lazzari G, Loi P, Loring JF, Okita K, Renfree MB, Seet S, Voracek T, Stejskal J, Ryder OA, Hildebrandt TB (2016) Rewinding the process of mammalian extinction. Zoo Biol 35:280–292 PubMed DOI
Schrader L, Hammerschmidt K (1997) Computer-aided analysis of acoustic parameters in animal vocalisations: a multi-parametric approach. Bioacoustics 7:247–265 DOI
Shrader AM, Owen-Smith N (2002) The role of companionship in the dispersal of white rhinoceroses (Ceratotherium simum). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 52:255–261 DOI
Sokal RR, Rohlf FJ (2012) Biometry: The Principles and Practice of Statistics in Biological Research. W.H. Freeman and Company, New York
Tibbetts EA, Dale J (2007) Individual recognition: it is good to be different. Trends Ecol Evol 22:529–537 PubMed DOI
Tulving E, Kroll N (1995) Novelty assessment in the brain and longterm memory encoding. Psychon Bull Rev 2:387–390 PubMed DOI
van Gyseghem R (1984) Observations on the ecology and behaviour of the northern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum cottoni). Z Saugetierkd 49:348–358
Vrba I, Donat P (1993) Activities version 2.1. Computer programme for behavioural studies
Waser PM, Brown CH (1984) Is there a “sound window” for primate communication? Behav Ecol Sociobiol 15:73–76 DOI
Watts HE, Blankenship LM, Dawes SE, Holekamp KE (2010) Responses of spotted hyenas to lions reflect individual differences in behavior. Ethology 116:1199–1209 DOI
White AM, Swaisgood RR, Czekala N (2007) Ranging patterns in white rhinoceros, Ceratotherium simum simum: implications for mating strategies. Anim Behav 74:349–356 DOI
Wyman MT, Charlton BD, Locatelli Y, Reby D (2011) Variability of female responses to conspecific vs. heterospecific male mating calls in polygynous deer: an open door to hybridization? PLoS ONE 6:23296 DOI
Wyman MT, Locatelli Y, Charlton BD, Reby D (2014) No preference in female sika deer for conspecific over heterospecific male sexual calls in a mate choice context. J Zool 293:92–99 DOI