Conspecifics as Cues to Territory Quality: A Preference of Juvenile Lizards (Anolis aeneus) for Previously Used Territories
- 1 May 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The American Naturalist
- Vol. 129 (5), 629-642
- https://doi.org/10.1086/284663
Abstract
When there is a premium on rapid territory establishment and it is difficult or time-consuming for animals to assess resources directly, they may use conspecific behavior as a cue to territory quality. In particular, the presence of a defending resident on a territory may be used as evidence that the territory is of sufficient quality to warrant territorial defense. In this case, we might expect animals to prefer a previously occupied territory to an equivalent territory that has lacked a resident. Juvenile Anolis aeneus lizards in the field were allowed two view to homesites surrounded by transparent acrylic walls. The experimental homesites each contained an aggressive territory owner; the control homesites had no owner but were otherwise equivalent to the experimental sites. When the enclosure walls and territory owner were removed, lizards from the clearings showed a clear preference for the previously used homesites. Experimental homesites were colonized more rapidly, attracted more visitors, were used for longer periods, generated more fights and chases, and attracted residents from longer distances than control homesites. These results suggest that juvenile lizards consider the presence or absence of previous territory owners when judging the relative quality of newly available territories.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Optimal group size in territorial animalsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1982
- Relationships Between Social Structure and Response To Novelty in Captive Jackdaws, Corvus Monedula L., I. Response To Novel SpaceBehaviour, 1982
- The Relationship between Selectivity and Food Abundance in a Juvenile LizardEcology, 1981
- Space competition in the acorn woodpecker: Power struggles in a cooperative breederAnimal Behaviour, 1981
- Foraging success in junco flocks and the effects of social hierarchyAnimal Behaviour, 1981
- A Field Study of the Ontogeny of Social Behavior in the Lizard Anolis Aene UsBehaviour, 1977
- Territoriality, habitat selection, and prior residency in underyearling Stichaeus punctatus (Pisces: Stichaeidae)Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1976
- Rainfall, activity and social behaviour in the lizard, Anolis aeneusAnimal Behaviour, 1976
- The Establishment and Reversibility of Dominance Relationships in Jewel Fish, Hemichromis Bimaculatus Gill (Pisces, Cichlidae): Effects of Prior Exposure and Prior Residence SituationsBehaviour, 1976
- Social Transmission of Acquired Behavior: A Discussion of Tradition and Social Learning in VertebratesAdvances in the Study of Behavior, 1976