Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.

The propensity for a grizzly bear to develop conflict behaviours might be a result of social learning between mothers and cubs, genetic inheritance, or both learning and inheritance. Using non-invasive genetic sampling, we collected grizzly bear hair samples during 2011-2014 across southwestern Albe...

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Main Authors: Andrea T Morehouse, Tabitha A Graves, Nate Mikle, Mark S Boyce
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5112868?pdf=render
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author Andrea T Morehouse
Tabitha A Graves
Nate Mikle
Mark S Boyce
author_facet Andrea T Morehouse
Tabitha A Graves
Nate Mikle
Mark S Boyce
author_sort Andrea T Morehouse
collection DOAJ
description The propensity for a grizzly bear to develop conflict behaviours might be a result of social learning between mothers and cubs, genetic inheritance, or both learning and inheritance. Using non-invasive genetic sampling, we collected grizzly bear hair samples during 2011-2014 across southwestern Alberta, Canada. We targeted private agricultural lands for hair samples at grizzly bear incident sites, defining an incident as an occurrence in which the grizzly bear caused property damage, obtained anthropogenic food, or killed or attempted to kill livestock or pets. We genotyped 213 unique grizzly bears (118 M, 95 F) at 24 microsatellite loci, plus the amelogenin marker for sex. We used the program COLONY to assign parentage. We evaluated 76 mother-offspring relationships and 119 father-offspring relationships. We compared the frequency of problem and non-problem offspring from problem and non-problem parents, excluding dependent offspring from our analysis. Our results support the social learning hypothesis, but not the genetic inheritance hypothesis. Offspring of problem mothers are more likely to be involved in conflict behaviours, while offspring from non-problem mothers are not likely to be involved in incidents or human-bear conflicts themselves (Barnard's test, p = 0.05, 62.5% of offspring from problem mothers were problem bears). There was no evidence that offspring are more likely to be involved in conflict behaviour if their fathers had been problem bears (Barnard's test, p = 0.92, 29.6% of offspring from problem fathers were problem bears). For the mother-offspring relationships evaluated, 30.3% of offspring were identified as problem bears independent of their mother's conflict status. Similarly, 28.6% of offspring were identified as problem bears independent of their father's conflict status. Proactive mitigation to prevent female bears from becoming problem individuals likely will help prevent the perpetuation of conflicts through social learning.
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spelling doaj.art-575fdc8a3d574411953c040fdb6173132022-12-22T01:19:41ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011111e016542510.1371/journal.pone.0165425Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.Andrea T MorehouseTabitha A GravesNate MikleMark S BoyceThe propensity for a grizzly bear to develop conflict behaviours might be a result of social learning between mothers and cubs, genetic inheritance, or both learning and inheritance. Using non-invasive genetic sampling, we collected grizzly bear hair samples during 2011-2014 across southwestern Alberta, Canada. We targeted private agricultural lands for hair samples at grizzly bear incident sites, defining an incident as an occurrence in which the grizzly bear caused property damage, obtained anthropogenic food, or killed or attempted to kill livestock or pets. We genotyped 213 unique grizzly bears (118 M, 95 F) at 24 microsatellite loci, plus the amelogenin marker for sex. We used the program COLONY to assign parentage. We evaluated 76 mother-offspring relationships and 119 father-offspring relationships. We compared the frequency of problem and non-problem offspring from problem and non-problem parents, excluding dependent offspring from our analysis. Our results support the social learning hypothesis, but not the genetic inheritance hypothesis. Offspring of problem mothers are more likely to be involved in conflict behaviours, while offspring from non-problem mothers are not likely to be involved in incidents or human-bear conflicts themselves (Barnard's test, p = 0.05, 62.5% of offspring from problem mothers were problem bears). There was no evidence that offspring are more likely to be involved in conflict behaviour if their fathers had been problem bears (Barnard's test, p = 0.92, 29.6% of offspring from problem fathers were problem bears). For the mother-offspring relationships evaluated, 30.3% of offspring were identified as problem bears independent of their mother's conflict status. Similarly, 28.6% of offspring were identified as problem bears independent of their father's conflict status. Proactive mitigation to prevent female bears from becoming problem individuals likely will help prevent the perpetuation of conflicts through social learning.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5112868?pdf=render
spellingShingle Andrea T Morehouse
Tabitha A Graves
Nate Mikle
Mark S Boyce
Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.
PLoS ONE
title Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.
title_full Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.
title_fullStr Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.
title_full_unstemmed Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.
title_short Nature vs. Nurture: Evidence for Social Learning of Conflict Behaviour in Grizzly Bears.
title_sort nature vs nurture evidence for social learning of conflict behaviour in grizzly bears
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5112868?pdf=render
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