Across a wide range of animal taxa, winners of previous fights are more likely to keep winning future contests, just as losers are more likely to keep losing. At present, such winner and loser effects are considered to be fairly transient. However, repeated experiences with winning and/or losing might increase the persistence of these effects generating long-lasting consequences for social structure. To test this, we exposed genetically identical individuals of a clonal fish, the Amazon molly (Poecilia formosa), to repeated winning and/or losing dominance interactions during the first two months of their life. We subsequently investigated whether these experiences affected the fish’s ability to achieve dominance in a hierarchy five months l...
Models of cooperation among nonkin suggest that social assortment is important for the evolution of ...
Aggressive contests amongst conspecifics are important to understand from an ecological and evolutio...
Memorizing dominance relationships can help animals avoid unwinnable subsequent contests. However, w...
Across a wide range of animal taxa, winners of previous fights are more likely to keep winning futur...
Across a wide range of animal taxa, winners of previous fights are more likely to keep winning futur...
The early social environment can have substantial, lifelong effects on vertebrate social behaviour, ...
Many animal societies have dominance hierarchies in which social rank is correlated with size. In su...
Animal conflicts are influenced by social experience such that a previous winning experience increas...
Behavioural individuality is thought to be caused by differences in genes and/or environmental condi...
Theory suggests that living in large social groups with dynamic social interactions often favors the...
In experiments, there are usually two general ways of obtaining dominants and subordinates to test ...
Winning or losing a fight can have lasting effects on competitors. Controlling for inherent fighting...
Competition for resources including food, physical space, and potential mates is a fundamental ecolo...
Understanding how animal groups form and function is a major goal in behavioural ecology. Both genet...
In social species, conflict with outsiders is predicted to affect within-group interactions, and thu...
Models of cooperation among nonkin suggest that social assortment is important for the evolution of ...
Aggressive contests amongst conspecifics are important to understand from an ecological and evolutio...
Memorizing dominance relationships can help animals avoid unwinnable subsequent contests. However, w...
Across a wide range of animal taxa, winners of previous fights are more likely to keep winning futur...
Across a wide range of animal taxa, winners of previous fights are more likely to keep winning futur...
The early social environment can have substantial, lifelong effects on vertebrate social behaviour, ...
Many animal societies have dominance hierarchies in which social rank is correlated with size. In su...
Animal conflicts are influenced by social experience such that a previous winning experience increas...
Behavioural individuality is thought to be caused by differences in genes and/or environmental condi...
Theory suggests that living in large social groups with dynamic social interactions often favors the...
In experiments, there are usually two general ways of obtaining dominants and subordinates to test ...
Winning or losing a fight can have lasting effects on competitors. Controlling for inherent fighting...
Competition for resources including food, physical space, and potential mates is a fundamental ecolo...
Understanding how animal groups form and function is a major goal in behavioural ecology. Both genet...
In social species, conflict with outsiders is predicted to affect within-group interactions, and thu...
Models of cooperation among nonkin suggest that social assortment is important for the evolution of ...
Aggressive contests amongst conspecifics are important to understand from an ecological and evolutio...
Memorizing dominance relationships can help animals avoid unwinnable subsequent contests. However, w...