five

Monk parakeets “test the waters” when forming new relationships

收藏
DataONE2025-10-28 更新2025-11-01 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:7e6d2656516e9b47b4920f6d76fa06b9b60a264a82bcf1288b0b588ab96809b5
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
To mitigate potential risks and develop trust, strangers may “test the waters” by gradually escalating the type of social investment from low cost to high cost. We introduced four unfamiliar groups of feral monk parakeets together and observed the sequence of social behaviors that occurred as relationships developed. We then tested the effect of relationship status (stranger vs familiar) on the probability of dyads following predicted sequences. We also tested whether strangers who progressed their relationships maintained higher rates of no-contact proximity compared to dyads that did not. We found that stranger dyads, but not familiar dyads, were more likely to (1) approach each other without contact before making contact and (2) follow predicted sequences of affiliative behaviors. Strangers that progressed to contact also had higher rates of associations than did birds that never made contact. We provide raw data and an R markdown file with code to reproduce all analyses and figures...., Social behaviors and predicted sequences We categorized the first observed instances of behaviors based on perceptions of relative risk and investment into 3 levels: Low (no-contact proximity), Moderate (shoulder contact, allopreening, beak touching), or High (allofeeding, copulating), and visualized these behaviors using a Sankey plot. Estimating the effect of relationship status on the sequence of behaviors To assess whether the predicted sequences occurred more often in stranger dyads than in familiar dyads, we used the R package brms (version2.220) to fit two generalized multi-membership models (GLMM) with a Bernoulli outcome (logit link) for whether or not dyads followed the expected sequences. To simulate how often predicted sequences would occur if stranger and familiar dyads had exhibited behaviors in random order, we shuffled (1,000 iterations) the timebin in which behaviors were observed among dyads. Testing for relationship progression among strangers Using the same permut..., # Monk parakeets “test the waters” when forming new relationships Dataset DOI: [10.5061/dryad.hx3ffbgs5](10.5061/dryad.hx3ffbgs5) ## Description of the data and file structure Observers recorded spatial associations and dyadic interactions using an all-occurrence sampling method with the Animal Observer application on iPads. ### Files and variables #### File: 2021_preperturbation_dyad_list.csv **Description:** list of birds during the experiment and all possible combinations of directed/undirected dyads (indcludes meta data) columns ##### Variables * dyadID: directed dyad; actor and subject color ID * actor: actor bird color ID * subject: receiver bird color ID * undir.dyad: undirected dyad; actor and subject ID ordered alphabetically * new.dyad: T/F; whether dyad were stranger/familiar * opp.sex: T/F; whether dyad were different/same sex #### File: BIOL.atts.csv **Description:** bird color ID and sex ##### Variables * color_ID: unique 3 color combination used to mark and id...,
创建时间:
2025-10-29
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务