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Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs

Social conflict is mostly studied in relation to aggression. A more integral approach, including aggressive and affiliative behaviour as well as physiology, may however give a better understanding of the animals' experience during social conflict. The experience of social conflict may also be r...

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Autores principales: Camerlink, Irene, Turner, Simon P., Ursinus, Winanda W., Reimert, Inonge, Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4245130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25427249
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0113502
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author Camerlink, Irene
Turner, Simon P.
Ursinus, Winanda W.
Reimert, Inonge
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
author_facet Camerlink, Irene
Turner, Simon P.
Ursinus, Winanda W.
Reimert, Inonge
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
author_sort Camerlink, Irene
collection PubMed
description Social conflict is mostly studied in relation to aggression. A more integral approach, including aggressive and affiliative behaviour as well as physiology, may however give a better understanding of the animals' experience during social conflict. The experience of social conflict may also be reflected in the spatial distribution between conspecifics. The objective was to assess the relationship between behaviour, physiology, and spatial integration in pigs (Sus scrofa) during social conflict. Hereto, 64 groups of pigs (9 wk of age) were studied in a 24 h regrouping test whereby pairs of familiar pigs were grouped with 2 unfamiliar pairs, in either barren or straw-enriched housing. Data on aggressive and affiliative behaviour, skin lesions, body weight, and haptoglobin could be summarized into three principal component analysis factors. These three factors were analysed in relation to spatial integration, i.e. inter-individual distances and lying in body contact. Pigs stayed up to 24 h after encounter in closer proximity to the familiar pig than to unfamiliar pigs. Pigs with a high factor 1 score were more inactive, gave little social nosing, had many skin lesions and a high body weight. They tended to space further away from the familiar pig (b = 1.9 cm; P = 0.08) and unfamiliar ones (b = 0.7 cm; P = 0.05). Pigs that were involved in much aggression (factor 2), and that had a strong increase in haptoglobin (factor 3), tended to be relatively most far away from unfamiliar pigs (b = 0.03 times further; P = 0.08). Results on lying in body contact were coherent with results on distances. Pigs in enriched housing spaced further apart than pigs in barren housing (P<0.001). The combined analysis of measures revealed animals that may either promote or slow down group cohesion, which may not have become clear from single parameters. This emphasizes the importance of an integral approach to social conflict.
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spelling pubmed-42451302014-12-05 Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs Camerlink, Irene Turner, Simon P. Ursinus, Winanda W. Reimert, Inonge Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth PLoS One Research Article Social conflict is mostly studied in relation to aggression. A more integral approach, including aggressive and affiliative behaviour as well as physiology, may however give a better understanding of the animals' experience during social conflict. The experience of social conflict may also be reflected in the spatial distribution between conspecifics. The objective was to assess the relationship between behaviour, physiology, and spatial integration in pigs (Sus scrofa) during social conflict. Hereto, 64 groups of pigs (9 wk of age) were studied in a 24 h regrouping test whereby pairs of familiar pigs were grouped with 2 unfamiliar pairs, in either barren or straw-enriched housing. Data on aggressive and affiliative behaviour, skin lesions, body weight, and haptoglobin could be summarized into three principal component analysis factors. These three factors were analysed in relation to spatial integration, i.e. inter-individual distances and lying in body contact. Pigs stayed up to 24 h after encounter in closer proximity to the familiar pig than to unfamiliar pigs. Pigs with a high factor 1 score were more inactive, gave little social nosing, had many skin lesions and a high body weight. They tended to space further away from the familiar pig (b = 1.9 cm; P = 0.08) and unfamiliar ones (b = 0.7 cm; P = 0.05). Pigs that were involved in much aggression (factor 2), and that had a strong increase in haptoglobin (factor 3), tended to be relatively most far away from unfamiliar pigs (b = 0.03 times further; P = 0.08). Results on lying in body contact were coherent with results on distances. Pigs in enriched housing spaced further apart than pigs in barren housing (P<0.001). The combined analysis of measures revealed animals that may either promote or slow down group cohesion, which may not have become clear from single parameters. This emphasizes the importance of an integral approach to social conflict. Public Library of Science 2014-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4245130/ /pubmed/25427249 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0113502 Text en © 2014 Camerlink et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Camerlink, Irene
Turner, Simon P.
Ursinus, Winanda W.
Reimert, Inonge
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs
title Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs
title_full Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs
title_fullStr Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs
title_full_unstemmed Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs
title_short Aggression and Affiliation during Social Conflict in Pigs
title_sort aggression and affiliation during social conflict in pigs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4245130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25427249
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0113502
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