Abstract

Despite much recent empirical work on inequity aversion in nonhuman species, many questions remain about its distribution across taxa and the factors that shape its evolution and expression. Past work suggests that domestic dogs (Canis familiaris) and wolves (Canis lupus) are averse to inequitable resource distributions in contexts that call upon some degree of training such as 'give paw' and 'buzzer press' tasks. However, it is unclear whether inequity aversion appears in other canid species and in other experimental contexts. Using a novel inequity aversion task that does not require specific training, this study helps address these gaps by investigating inequity aversion in domestic dogs and a closely related but non-domesticated canid, the dingo (Canis dingo). Subjects were presented with equal and unequal reward distributions and given the opportunity to approach or refuse to approach allocations. Measures of interest were (1) subjects' refusal to approach when getting no food; (2) approach latency; and (3) social referencing. None of these measures differed systematically across the inequity condition and control conditions in either dogs or dingoes. These findings add to the growing literature on inequity aversion in canids, providing data from a new species and a new experimental context. Additionally, they raise questions about the experimental features that must be in place for inequity aversion to appear in canids.

Highlights

  • Cooperation, where one individual provides a benefit to another individual [1], is vulnerable to exploitation by agents who benefit from collective action without investing in it

  • To test whether inequity aversion is observed in other canids, this study examined inequity aversion in Australian dingoes (Canis dingo)

  • Dogs were more likely to approach overall compared to dingoes (Fig 2A; Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMMs) predicting approach as a function of Species: χ21 = 9.38, P = 0.002; Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Cooperation, where one individual provides a benefit to another individual [1], is vulnerable to exploitation by agents who benefit from collective action without investing in it. Human adults exhibit a strong aversion to unfair outcomes and are willing to sacrifice personal resources to avoid receiving relatively less than a peer (disadvantageous inequity; [6,7,8,9]) and, in some cases, more than a peer (advantageous inequity; [7, 9]).

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