4.2 Article

Sentinel behavior in captive meerkats (Suricata suricatta)

Journal

ZOO BIOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 1, Pages 10-19

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/zoo.21644

Keywords

meerkats; playback experiments; predatory birds; sentinel behavior; super sentinels

Funding

  1. FWF
  2. Austrian Science Fund [P 31034-B29]

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This study observed the sentinel behavior of captive meerkat groups and found that they behave similarly to wild groups. Some individuals perform guard duty more frequently, with the existence of "super sentinels." Playbacks showed that sentinels have stronger reactions to calls of predatory bird species, indicating their ability to categorize bird calls. Overall, sentinel behavior appears to be a combination of innate patterns and experience, suggesting that future studies could further explore the influence of experience on group-specific sentinel behavior patterns in captive meerkats.
The social and cooperative behavior of meerkats (Suricata suricatta), specifically their sentinel behavior, has been intensively studied in free-ranging populations. This study focuses on whether guarding in captive meerkats exhibits a pattern similar to that described for wild groups. Sentinel behavior in captivity has been somewhat neglected because predation is usually not a critical factor. Nonetheless, observations in captivity might reveal whether individual or group experience influences this specific behavior pattern. We observed three captive meerkat groups (in outdoor as well as indoor enclosures) and analyzed the duration of guarding sequences, the number of established guards, the guard posture, and the individual guard positions. We also conducted playback experiments to investigate the reaction of the sentinel and the group to bird calls (songbird vs. predatory bird species). The results demonstrated that captive groups behave much the same as wild groups. Certain individuals performed the guard job more often than other group members. Accordingly, the super sentinels observed in the wild also exist in captive groups. Playbacks showed that the sentinels reacted more strongly to the calls of predatory bird species, indicating that captive meerkats are able to categorize bird calls. We also documented major differences in behavioral responses to the calls of specific predatory bird species. Our observations underline that sentinel behavior is probably a combination of an innate, imprinted pattern that is further affected by the experience. Future studies might further investigate this influence of experience, beyond innate behavior, on the group-specific sentinel behavior pattern in captive meerkats.

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