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Territory holders are more aggressive towards older, more dangerous floaters
by
Hoover, Brian
, Lee, Katherine R.
, Piper, Walter H.
in
Aggression
/ Aggressiveness
/ Animal Ecology
/ Animals
/ Aquatic birds
/ Behavioral Sciences
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Breeding of animals
/ Chickens
/ Chicks
/ Colonies & territories
/ ecology
/ Evictions
/ Juveniles
/ Life Sciences
/ Nomads
/ ORIGINAL ARTICLE
/ Owners
/ Rare species
/ Risk
/ Social learning
/ sociobiology
/ Submissiveness
/ Subordination
/ Territorial behavior
/ Territory
/ Yodeling
/ Zoology
2022
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Territory holders are more aggressive towards older, more dangerous floaters
by
Hoover, Brian
, Lee, Katherine R.
, Piper, Walter H.
in
Aggression
/ Aggressiveness
/ Animal Ecology
/ Animals
/ Aquatic birds
/ Behavioral Sciences
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Breeding of animals
/ Chickens
/ Chicks
/ Colonies & territories
/ ecology
/ Evictions
/ Juveniles
/ Life Sciences
/ Nomads
/ ORIGINAL ARTICLE
/ Owners
/ Rare species
/ Risk
/ Social learning
/ sociobiology
/ Submissiveness
/ Subordination
/ Territorial behavior
/ Territory
/ Yodeling
/ Zoology
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Territory holders are more aggressive towards older, more dangerous floaters
by
Hoover, Brian
, Lee, Katherine R.
, Piper, Walter H.
in
Aggression
/ Aggressiveness
/ Animal Ecology
/ Animals
/ Aquatic birds
/ Behavioral Sciences
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Breeding of animals
/ Chickens
/ Chicks
/ Colonies & territories
/ ecology
/ Evictions
/ Juveniles
/ Life Sciences
/ Nomads
/ ORIGINAL ARTICLE
/ Owners
/ Rare species
/ Risk
/ Social learning
/ sociobiology
/ Submissiveness
/ Subordination
/ Territorial behavior
/ Territory
/ Yodeling
/ Zoology
2022
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Territory holders are more aggressive towards older, more dangerous floaters
Journal Article
Territory holders are more aggressive towards older, more dangerous floaters
2022
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Overview
Animals that show aggression often risk injury and incur steep energetic costs. Thus, aggression should occur at such times and towards such opponents as to maximize fitness. We tested hypotheses predicting adaptive territorial aggression in the common loon, a species in which ease of observation of territory owners and floaters (prebreeders) seeking to evict them provide a rare window onto owner-floater competition. As predicted, older, more competitive floaters (4-year-olds and upwards) tended to intrude into territories that had produced chicks the previous year (and, hence, were of high quality). Older floaters also showed predicted increases in aggression and territorial yodeling, and a lower rate of submissive behaviors than younger floaters. Floaters of all ages intruded more often than neighboring territory owners, as predicted, but tended to avoid territories with chicks. For their part, owners yodeled more often and behaved more aggressively during chick-rearing, although yodels peaked in frequency 2 weeks before aggression, suggesting that males with young chicks yodel to discourage intrusions, but employ aggression to protect older chicks. Territory owners showed the predicted higher rates of aggression and yodeling towards older, more dangerous floaters than towards young, submissive ones. However, territorial pairs did not treat floaters more aggressively than neighbors, overall. Moreover, owners showed no spike in aggression nor yodeling following a year with chicks, perhaps to avoid providing social information to floaters that use chicks as social information to target territories for eviction.
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