Abstract

Post-conflict affiliative interactions have been widely investigated in primates but not extensively in other species. Using the Post Conflict-Matched Control (PC-MC) comparison method, this study investigated the patterns of post-conflict opponent affiliation (POA) of a captive family group of 19 arctic wolves (Canis lupus arctos), investigating the correlation with various factors. We found that POAs occurred mainly in the non-feeding context and more often when the victim was dominant and the aggressor subordinate. Furthermore, POAs were more likely to have been initiated by the victim than the aggressor. Victims’ stress related behaviours occurred more in PC than MC periods, and more after high vs. low intensity aggressions but they were not more likely to occur after conflicts between wolves with a stronger social bond and POAs did not reduce their rate of occurrence. Our results showed that re-aggression was twice less frequent when a friendly interaction occurred between the aggressor and the victim, and consistent with this, victims engaged in POAs more often than the aggressor. Overall, our results support the hypothesis that POAs in wolves may have been selected for as a mechanism to avoid conflict escalation, which could lead to social disruption and hence jeopardize cooperative activities. The high relatedness among individuals in the pack and the greater dependence of all members on cooperation in breeding and hunting may reduce the importance of ‘relationship quality’ as a mediating factor of POAs, although dominance relationships, which are directly linked to the risks of further conflicts, do play an important role.

Highlights

  • Reconciliation is classically defined as the tendency by former opponents of a conflict to contact each other and to engage in affiliative behavioural patterns relatively shortly after a conflict [1]

  • In the current study we investigated the existence of post-conflict affiliative behaviours between former opponents in a family group of arctic wolves and the function of these behaviours

  • The relevant committee, Tierversuchs-kommission am Bundesministerium fur Wissenschaft und Forschung (Austria) and all institutions involved (Wolf Science Center, Messerli Research Institute, University of Veterinary Medicine of Vienna, and Olomouc Zoo) allow us to run this research without special permissions regarding animals since this is not required for such observational studies (Tierversuchsgesetz 2012– TVG 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Reconciliation is classically defined as the tendency by former opponents of a conflict to contact each other and to engage in affiliative behavioural patterns relatively shortly after a conflict [1]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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