Mother-offspring recognition via contact calls in cattle, Bos taurus
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Mother-offspring recognition via contact calls in cattle, Bos taurus. / Padilla De La Torre, Mónica; Briefer, Elodie F.; Ochocki, Brad M.; McElligott, Alan G.; Reader, Tom.
I: Animal Behaviour, Bind 114, 2016, s. 147-154.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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T1 - Mother-offspring recognition via contact calls in cattle, Bos taurus
AU - Padilla De La Torre, Mónica
AU - Briefer, Elodie F.
AU - Ochocki, Brad M.
AU - McElligott, Alan G.
AU - Reader, Tom
N1 - Funding Information: We thank Catherine, Desire and David Hackett for their help and access to the animals on their farm in Radcliffe on Trent, Nottinghamshire, U.K. M.P.d.l.T. was funded by the National Council of Science and Technology, Mexico (CONACYT) PhD (scholarship No. 304365 ), and E.F.B. by a Swiss National Science Foundation fellowship (No. PZ00P3_148200 ). Publisher Copyright: © 2016 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - Individual recognition in gregarious species is fundamental in order to avoid misdirected parental investment. In ungulates, two very different parental care strategies have been identified: 'hider' offspring usually lie concealed in vegetation whereas offspring of 'follower' species remain with their mothers while they forage. These two strategies have been suggested to impact on mother-offspring vocal recognition, with unidirectional recognition of the mother by offspring occurring in hiders and bidirectional recognition in followers. In domestic cattle, Bos taurus, a facultative hider species, vocal communication and recognition have not been studied in detail under free-ranging conditions, where cows and calves can graze freely and where hiding behaviour can occur. We hypothesized that, as a hider species, cattle under these circumstances would display unidirectional vocal recognition. To test this hypothesis, we conducted playback experiments using mother-offspring contact calls. We found that cows were more likely to respond, by moving their ears and/or looking, turning or walking towards the loudspeaker, to calls of their own calves than to calls from other calves. Similarly, calves responded more rapidly, and were more likely to move their ears and/or look, turn or walk towards the loudspeaker, and to call back and/or meet their mothers, in response to calls from their own mothers than to calls from other females. Contrary to our predictions, our results suggest that mother-offspring vocal individual recognition is bidirectional in cattle. Additionally, mothers of younger calves tended to respond more strongly to playbacks than mothers of older calves. Therefore, mother responses to calf vocalizations are at least partially influenced by calf age.
AB - Individual recognition in gregarious species is fundamental in order to avoid misdirected parental investment. In ungulates, two very different parental care strategies have been identified: 'hider' offspring usually lie concealed in vegetation whereas offspring of 'follower' species remain with their mothers while they forage. These two strategies have been suggested to impact on mother-offspring vocal recognition, with unidirectional recognition of the mother by offspring occurring in hiders and bidirectional recognition in followers. In domestic cattle, Bos taurus, a facultative hider species, vocal communication and recognition have not been studied in detail under free-ranging conditions, where cows and calves can graze freely and where hiding behaviour can occur. We hypothesized that, as a hider species, cattle under these circumstances would display unidirectional vocal recognition. To test this hypothesis, we conducted playback experiments using mother-offspring contact calls. We found that cows were more likely to respond, by moving their ears and/or looking, turning or walking towards the loudspeaker, to calls of their own calves than to calls from other calves. Similarly, calves responded more rapidly, and were more likely to move their ears and/or look, turn or walk towards the loudspeaker, and to call back and/or meet their mothers, in response to calls from their own mothers than to calls from other females. Contrary to our predictions, our results suggest that mother-offspring vocal individual recognition is bidirectional in cattle. Additionally, mothers of younger calves tended to respond more strongly to playbacks than mothers of older calves. Therefore, mother responses to calf vocalizations are at least partially influenced by calf age.
KW - Bidirectional individual recognition
KW - Bioacoustics
KW - Free-ranging cattle
KW - Playbacks
KW - Vocalizations
U2 - 10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.02.004
DO - 10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.02.004
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:84959372699
VL - 114
SP - 147
EP - 154
JO - Animal Behaviour
JF - Animal Behaviour
SN - 0003-3472
ER -
ID: 356630550