4.7 Article

Aerial drone observations identified a multilevel society in feral horses

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-79790-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. KAKENHI [20J20702, 15H05309, 17H0582, 19H00629, 18K18342, 18H05524, 16H06283]
  2. JSPS [LGP-U04]
  3. Kyoto University SPIRITS
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20J20702, 15H05309, 18K18342] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study utilized drone data to examine the multilevel structure of feral horse society, revealing patterns of unit relationships and positioning that indicate the presence of a hierarchical social organization. This contributes to understanding the functions and mechanisms of multilevel societies and offers insights for future cross-species comparisons and social modeling.
The study of non-human multilevel societies can give us insights into how group-level relationships function and are maintained in a social system, but their mechanisms are still poorly understood. The aim of this study was to apply spatial association data obtained from drones to verify the presence of a multilevel structure in a feral horse society. We took aerial photos of individuals that appeared in pre-fixed areas and collected positional data. The threshold distance of the association was defined based on the distribution pattern of the inter-individual distance. The association rates of individuals showed bimodality, suggesting the presence of small social organizations or units. Inter-unit distances were significantly smaller than those in randomly replaced data, which showed that units associate to form a higher-level social organization or herd. Moreover, this herd had a structure where large mixed-sex units were more likely to occupy the center than small mixed-sex units and all-male-units, which were instead on the periphery. These three pieces of evidence regarding the existence of units, unit association, and stable positioning among units strongly indicated a multilevel structure in horse society. The present study contributes to understanding the functions and mechanisms of multilevel societies through comparisons with other social indices and models as well as cross-species comparisons in future studies.

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