4.6 Article

Social ascent changes cognition, behaviour and physiology in a highly social cichlid fish

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0448

Keywords

social dominance; spatial maze; novel object recognition; associative learning; cortisol; testosterone

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) Bio/computational Evolution in Action Consortium (BEACON) Center for the Study of Evolution in Action and an NSF [IOS1354942]
  2. Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine)
  3. UT Austin Graduate School Continuing Fellowship, The Zoology Scholarship Endowment for Excellence
  4. Department of Integrative Biology Doctoral Dissertation Improvement grant

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This study assessed male Astatotilapia burtoni fish in cognitive tasks before and after a community perturbation. The researchers found that ascending males underwent physiological changes and showed preference for novel object recognition during the perturbation, and differed in social competence from non-ascenders. Principal component analysis also identified specific cognitive and physiological attributes that predispose certain individuals to ascend in social status.
When an individual ascends in dominance status within their social community, they often undergo a suite of behavioural, physiological and neuromolecular changes. While these changes have been extensively characterized across a number of species, we know much less about the degree to which these changes in turn influence cognitive processes like associative learning, memory and spatial navigation. Here, we assessed male Astatotilapia burtoni, an African cichlid fish known for its dynamic social dominance hierarchies, in a set of cognitive tasks both before and after a community perturbation in which some individuals ascended in dominance status. We assayed steroid hormone (cortisol, testosterone) levels before and after the community experienced a social perturbation. We found that ascending males changed their physiology and novel object recognition preference during the perturbation, and they subsequently differed in social competence from non-ascenders. Additionally, using a principal component analysis we were able to identify specific cognitive and physiological attributes that appear to predispose certain individuals to ascend in social status once a perturbation occurs. These previously undiscovered relationships between social ascent and cognition further emphasize the broad influence of social dominance on animal decision-making. This article is part of the theme issue 'The centennial of the pecking order: current state and future prospects for the study of dominance hierarchies'.

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