Memory of conspecifics in male salamanders Plethodon cinereus: Implications for territorial defense
Author(s) -
Nancy R. Kohn,
Jennifer Deitloff,
Schuyler F. Dartez,
Michelle M. Wilcox,
Robert G. Jaeger
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
current zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.971
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 2058-5888
pISSN - 1674-5507
DOI - 10.1093/czoolo/59.3.326
Subject(s) - aggression , separation (statistics) , biology , affect (linguistics) , psychology , zoology , demography , developmental psychology , communication , statistics , mathematics , sociology
We investigated how exposure duration (time that two individuals initially interact) and separation interval (time be- tween the initial interaction and a subsequent interaction) affect recognition memory of conspecifics in male red-backed sala- manders Plethodon cinereus. Previous studies have demonstrated that this species aggressively defends territories. We recorded aggressive behavior to assess recognition memory, because aggression is more intense toward previously unencountered indi- viduals compared to previously encountered individuals in this species. We found that with 15-min exposures and 5-day separa- tion intervals, focal males did not spend significantly more time threatening 'unfamiliar' intruders than 'familiar' intruders. After either 8-hour exposures and 5-day separation intervals and 5-day exposures and 5-day separation intervals, focal males spent sig- nificantly more time threatening unfamiliar intruders than familiar intruders. These results suggest that male red-backed salaman- ders can remember familiar conspecifics (e.g., territorial neighbors) after at least an 8-hour exposure duration and that memory persists at least as long as 5 days. After 5-day exposure and 15-day separation intervals, we found no significant difference in ag- gressive behavior toward familiar and unfamiliar intruders. Long separation intervals (15 days) may lead either to loss of memory of previously familiar individuals or, alternatively, aggressive reassessment of individuals as only a change in behavior indicates positively that memory has occurred. Thus, variance in territorial defense within an individual may depend on its ability to recog- nize conspecific males (Current Zoology 58 (3): 326-334, 2013). Keywords Individual recognition, Memory, Plethodon cinereus, Red-backed salamanders, Territoriality
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