德玛森小岩鲷个体间能量代谢、个性特征的相似度与社会亲近度的关系

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INTER-INDIVIDUAL SIMILARITY IN ENERGY METABOLISM, PERSONALITY TRAITS, AND SOCIAL PROXIMITY IN CHINDONGO DEMASONI

  • 摘要: 研究以德玛森小岩鲷(Chindongo demasoni)幼鱼为实验对象, 考察了个体间能量代谢(日常代谢率RMR和最大代谢率MMR)、个性特征(活跃性、攻击性和社会性)的相似度对社会亲近度及社交偏好的影响, 同时分析了能量代谢与个性特征之间的关联。结果显示: 德玛森小岩鲷个体的能量代谢与个性特征均不相关; MMR差异较大的个体反而彼此的社会亲近程度更高(P=0.005), 其中高代谢个体更倾向于选择低代谢个体作为社交对象。此外, 攻击性相似的个体更倾向于彼此靠近(P<0.001)。高代谢个体选择低代谢同伴的策略可能有助于降低种内竞争, 同时维持集群带来的优势(如降低被捕食风险等); 而攻击性相近的个体表现出的更强空间接近倾向可能与该物种严格的社群等级制度有关——攻击性相当的个体需要通过直接对抗来确定彼此的等级地位。研究结果表明, 德玛森小岩鲷个体的能量代谢与个性特征在很大程度上相互独立, 但二者均可作为社会互动中同伴选择的重要依据。此外, 种内竞争可能在调节鱼类社会互动过程中发挥关键作用。

     

    Abstract: The energy metabolism level and personality traits of animal individuals may significantly affect their physiological requirements and behavioral strategies, making them key determinants of companion selection in social interactions. The juvenile Chindongo demasoni was selected as the experimental subjects to investigate how similarity in energy metabolism (routine metabolic rate, RMR; maximum metabolic rate, MMR) and personality traits (activity, aggression, and sociability) influences social proximity and preference. Additionally, the relationship between energy metabolism and personality traits was analyzed. The results showed no significant correlation between energy metabolism and personality traits in C. demasoni. However, individuals with greater differences in MMR exhibited higher social proximity (P=0.005), with high-metabolism tending to choose low-metabolism as social partners. Moreover, individuals with similar levels of aggression were more likely to stay close to each other (P<0.001). The tendency of high-metabolism individuals selecting low-metabolism companions may represent an adaptive strategy to balance group-living benefits with reduced intraspecific competition. Meanwhile, the stronger spatial proximity tendency observed in individuals with similar aggression levels may be related to the species’ strict social hierarchy, where similar aggression levels need to engage in direct confrontations to establish dominance. These findings suggest that energy metabolism and personality traits are largely independent in Chindongo demasoni but both shape companion selection during social interactions. Intraspecific competition appears critical in molding fish social interactions, highlighting the complex interplay between metabolic physiology and behavioral ecology.

     

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