Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus

Social groups composed of familiar individuals exhibit better coordination than unfamiliar groups; however, the ways familiarity contributes to coordination are poorly understood. Prior social experience probably allows individuals to learn the tendencies of familiar group-mates and respond accordin...

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Main Authors: Riva J. Riley, Elizabeth R. Gillie, Cat Horswill, Rufus A. Johnstone, Neeltje J. Boogert, Andrea Manica
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2019-09-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.190587
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spelling doaj-8cb3b04cca464d39a31cd5b1917c3f632020-11-25T03:57:37ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032019-09-016910.1098/rsos.190587190587Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneusRiva J. RileyElizabeth R. GillieCat HorswillRufus A. JohnstoneNeeltje J. BoogertAndrea ManicaSocial groups composed of familiar individuals exhibit better coordination than unfamiliar groups; however, the ways familiarity contributes to coordination are poorly understood. Prior social experience probably allows individuals to learn the tendencies of familiar group-mates and respond accordingly. Without prior experience, individuals would benefit from strategies for enhancing coordination with unfamiliar others. We used a social catfish, Corydoras aeneus, that uses discrete, observable tactile interactions to assess whether active interactions could facilitate coordination, and how their role might be mediated by familiarity. We describe this previously understudied physical interaction, ‘nudges’, and show it to be associated with group coordination and cohesion. Furthermore, we investigated nudging and coordination in familiar/unfamiliar pairs. In all pairs, we found that nudging rates were higher during coordinated movements than when fish were together but not coordinating. We observed no familiarity-based difference in coordination or cohesion. Instead, unfamiliar pairs exhibited significantly higher nudging rates, suggesting that unfamiliar pairs may be able to compensate for unfamiliarity through increased nudging. By contrast, familiar individuals coordinated with comparatively little nudging. Second, we analysed nudging and cohesion within triplets of two familiar and one unfamiliar individual (where familiar individuals had a choice of partner). Although all individuals nudged at similar rates, the unfamiliar group-mate was less cohesive than its familiar group-mates and spent more time alone. Unfamiliar individuals that nudged their group-mates more frequently exhibited higher cohesion, indicating that nudging may facilitate cohesion for the unfamiliar group-mate. Overall, our results suggest that nudges can mitigate unfamiliarity, but that their usage is reduced in the case of familiar individuals, implying a cost is associated with the behaviour.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.190587corydorastactile interactiongroup dynamicssociality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Riva J. Riley
Elizabeth R. Gillie
Cat Horswill
Rufus A. Johnstone
Neeltje J. Boogert
Andrea Manica
spellingShingle Riva J. Riley
Elizabeth R. Gillie
Cat Horswill
Rufus A. Johnstone
Neeltje J. Boogert
Andrea Manica
Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus
Royal Society Open Science
corydoras
tactile interaction
group dynamics
sociality
author_facet Riva J. Riley
Elizabeth R. Gillie
Cat Horswill
Rufus A. Johnstone
Neeltje J. Boogert
Andrea Manica
author_sort Riva J. Riley
title Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus
title_short Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus
title_full Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus
title_fullStr Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus
title_full_unstemmed Coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in Corydoras aeneus
title_sort coping with strangers: how familiarity and active interactions shape group coordination in corydoras aeneus
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Social groups composed of familiar individuals exhibit better coordination than unfamiliar groups; however, the ways familiarity contributes to coordination are poorly understood. Prior social experience probably allows individuals to learn the tendencies of familiar group-mates and respond accordingly. Without prior experience, individuals would benefit from strategies for enhancing coordination with unfamiliar others. We used a social catfish, Corydoras aeneus, that uses discrete, observable tactile interactions to assess whether active interactions could facilitate coordination, and how their role might be mediated by familiarity. We describe this previously understudied physical interaction, ‘nudges’, and show it to be associated with group coordination and cohesion. Furthermore, we investigated nudging and coordination in familiar/unfamiliar pairs. In all pairs, we found that nudging rates were higher during coordinated movements than when fish were together but not coordinating. We observed no familiarity-based difference in coordination or cohesion. Instead, unfamiliar pairs exhibited significantly higher nudging rates, suggesting that unfamiliar pairs may be able to compensate for unfamiliarity through increased nudging. By contrast, familiar individuals coordinated with comparatively little nudging. Second, we analysed nudging and cohesion within triplets of two familiar and one unfamiliar individual (where familiar individuals had a choice of partner). Although all individuals nudged at similar rates, the unfamiliar group-mate was less cohesive than its familiar group-mates and spent more time alone. Unfamiliar individuals that nudged their group-mates more frequently exhibited higher cohesion, indicating that nudging may facilitate cohesion for the unfamiliar group-mate. Overall, our results suggest that nudges can mitigate unfamiliarity, but that their usage is reduced in the case of familiar individuals, implying a cost is associated with the behaviour.
topic corydoras
tactile interaction
group dynamics
sociality
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.190587
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