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Neophobia across social contexts in juvenile herring gulls

Unfortunately the abstract isn't available in English yet.
Neophobia, the fear or avoidance of the unfamiliar, can have significant fitness consequences. It is typically assessed by exposing individuals to unfamiliar objects when they are alone, but in social species, the presence of conspecifics can influence neophobia. However, previous research on the effect of group dynamics on neophobic responses has produced mixed results. Here, we explored the degree of neophobia of an individual in different social contexts in a highly social species, the herring gull. To this end, we exposed juvenile herring gulls (n = 54) to novel objects in both individual and group settings (4–5 individuals), replicating each condition twice. Individuals tested in groups were quicker to eat and spent more time near a novel object than individuals tested alone. The results of our study suggest that the presence of group members reduces perceived individual risk, allowing individuals to behave less cautiously. Preregistered Stage 1 protocol: https://osf.io/u4b7q (date of in-principle acceptance: 17 May 2024).

Details

Number of pages 1
Volume 12
Magazine issue 5
Pages (to-from) 250398
Type A1: Web of Science-article
Category Research
Magazine ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Issns 2054-5703
Publisher ROYAL SOC
Language English
Bibtex

@misc{72cb4e92-b99c-4505-adb2-5a574f2f3488,
title = "Neophobia across social contexts in juvenile herring gulls",
abstract = "Neophobia, the fear or avoidance of the unfamiliar, can have significant fitness consequences. It is typically assessed by exposing individuals to unfamiliar objects when they are alone, but in social species, the presence of conspecifics can influence neophobia. However, previous research on the effect of group dynamics on neophobic responses has produced mixed results. Here, we explored the degree of neophobia of an individual in different social contexts in a highly social species, the herring gull. To this end, we exposed juvenile herring gulls (n = 54) to novel objects in both individual and group settings (4–5 individuals), replicating each condition twice. Individuals tested in groups were quicker to eat and spent more time near a novel object than individuals tested alone. The results of our study suggest that the presence of group members reduces perceived individual risk, allowing individuals to behave less cautiously. Preregistered Stage 1 protocol: https://osf.io/u4b7q (date of in-principle acceptance: 17 May 2024).",
author = "Reinoud Allaert and Sophia Knoch and Simon Braem and Dries Debeer and An Martel and Wendt Müller and Eric Stienen and Luc Lens and Frederick Verbruggen",
year = "2025",
month = may,
day = "01",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.250398",
language = "English",
publisher = "ROYAL SOC",
address = "Belgium,
type = "Other"
}

Authors

Reinoud Allaert
Sophia Knoch
Simon Braem
Dries Debeer
An Martel
Wendt Müller
Eric Stienen
Luc Lens
Frederick Verbruggen