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Some subordinates are more equal than others: Play fihgting amongst adult subordinate male rats

✍ Scribed by Serlio M. Pells; Vivien C. Pells; Mario M. McKenna


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
592 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0096-140X

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✦ Synopsis


Adult male rats living together form dominance relationships, with one dominant and the remainder adopting subordinate roles. In previous studies, it was shown that in adult male pairs, the subordinate rat initiates more playful contacts and retains a more juvenile response to the playful contacts by the dominant. In this experiment, triads were used to examine the play between subordinate males. The subordinates directed fewer playful contacts to each other than to the dominant rat, and there was a symmetrical play relationship between the subordinates. After the dominant was removed from the colony, one subordinate became the dominant. Playful interactions amongst these pairs increased, with the subordinate initiating more playful contacts than the dominant. Furthermore, from a similarly low frequency of juvenile-type response to playful contact to each other when in triads, the subordinate in the dyads increased its frequency of juvenile responses to the dominant partner. This supports the hypothesis that the playful behavior of subordinate male rats towards the dominant is an adaptive response, serving a "friendship maintenance" function. Finally, when in triads, one subordinate was more playful with the dominant than the other subordinate. It was the least playful subordinate that was the most likely to become the dominant. This suggests that within a colony, not all subordinates are the same. o 1993 wiley-Liss, I ~C .