Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.

Domestication has caused a range of similar phenotypic changes across taxa, relating to physiology, morphology and behaviour. It has been suggested that this recurring domesticated phenotype may be a result of correlated responses to a central trait, namely increased tameness. We selected Red Jungle...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Beatrix Agnvall, Per Jensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5112774?pdf=render
id doaj-441991a6a3a34eac8c8d4f5433c916d3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-441991a6a3a34eac8c8d4f5433c916d32020-11-24T20:41:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011111e016607510.1371/journal.pone.0166075Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.Beatrix AgnvallPer JensenDomestication has caused a range of similar phenotypic changes across taxa, relating to physiology, morphology and behaviour. It has been suggested that this recurring domesticated phenotype may be a result of correlated responses to a central trait, namely increased tameness. We selected Red Junglefowl, the ancestors of domesticated chickens, during five generations for reduced fear of humans. This caused a marked and significant response in tameness, and previous studies have found correlated effects on growth, metabolism, reproduction, and some behaviour not directly selected for. Here, we report the results from a series of behavioural tests carried out on the initial parental generation (P0) and the fifth selected generation (S5), focusing on behaviour not functionally related to tameness, in order to study any correlated effects. Birds were tested for fear of humans, social reinstatement tendency, open field behaviour at two different ages, foraging/exploration, response to a simulated aerial predator attack and tonic immobility. In S5, there were no effects of selection on foraging/exploration or tonic immobility, while in the social reinstatement and open field tests there were significant interactions between selection and sex. In the aerial predator test, there were significant main effects of selection, indicating that fear of humans may represent a general wariness towards predators. In conclusion, we found only small correlated effects on behaviours not related to the tameness trait selected for, in spite of them showing high genetic correlations to fear of humans in a previous study on the same population. This suggests that species-specific behaviour is generally resilient to changes during domestication.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5112774?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Beatrix Agnvall
Per Jensen
spellingShingle Beatrix Agnvall
Per Jensen
Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Beatrix Agnvall
Per Jensen
author_sort Beatrix Agnvall
title Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.
title_short Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.
title_full Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.
title_fullStr Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Divergent Selection for Fear of Humans on Behaviour in Red Junglefowl.
title_sort effects of divergent selection for fear of humans on behaviour in red junglefowl.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Domestication has caused a range of similar phenotypic changes across taxa, relating to physiology, morphology and behaviour. It has been suggested that this recurring domesticated phenotype may be a result of correlated responses to a central trait, namely increased tameness. We selected Red Junglefowl, the ancestors of domesticated chickens, during five generations for reduced fear of humans. This caused a marked and significant response in tameness, and previous studies have found correlated effects on growth, metabolism, reproduction, and some behaviour not directly selected for. Here, we report the results from a series of behavioural tests carried out on the initial parental generation (P0) and the fifth selected generation (S5), focusing on behaviour not functionally related to tameness, in order to study any correlated effects. Birds were tested for fear of humans, social reinstatement tendency, open field behaviour at two different ages, foraging/exploration, response to a simulated aerial predator attack and tonic immobility. In S5, there were no effects of selection on foraging/exploration or tonic immobility, while in the social reinstatement and open field tests there were significant interactions between selection and sex. In the aerial predator test, there were significant main effects of selection, indicating that fear of humans may represent a general wariness towards predators. In conclusion, we found only small correlated effects on behaviours not related to the tameness trait selected for, in spite of them showing high genetic correlations to fear of humans in a previous study on the same population. This suggests that species-specific behaviour is generally resilient to changes during domestication.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5112774?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT beatrixagnvall effectsofdivergentselectionforfearofhumansonbehaviourinredjunglefowl
AT perjensen effectsofdivergentselectionforfearofhumansonbehaviourinredjunglefowl
_version_ 1716824352373080064