Abstract

When individuals exchange helpful acts reciprocally, increasing the benefit of the receiver can enhance its propensity to return a favour, as pay-offs are typically correlated in iterated interactions. Therefore, reciprocally cooperating animals should consider the relative benefit for the receiver when deciding to help a conspecific. Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) exchange food reciprocally and thereby take into account both the cost of helping and the potential benefit to the receiver. By using a variant of the sequential iterated prisoner’s dilemma paradigm, we show that rats may determine the need of another individual by olfactory cues alone. In an experimental food-exchange task, test subjects were provided with odour cues from hungry or satiated conspecifics located in a different room. Our results show that wild-type Norway rats provide help to a stooge quicker when they receive odour cues from a hungry rather than from a satiated conspecific. Using chemical analysis by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), we identify seven volatile organic compounds that differ in their abundance between hungry and satiated rats. Combined, this “smell of hunger” can apparently serve as a reliable cue of need in reciprocal cooperation, which supports the hypothesis of honest signalling.

Highlights

  • Reciprocal cooperation among unrelated individuals is widespread in animals

  • A wire mesh divided the test cage (80 cm × 50 cm × 37.5 cm), with one compartment used for the focal rat and the other one for its experimental partner

  • A food reward was placed on the other side of the tray, so that it could be reached only by the experimental partner of the pulling rat, that is, the receiver

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Summary

Introduction

Reciprocal cooperation among unrelated individuals is widespread in animals (for a review including 79 vertebrate species, see the work by Taborsky and colleagues [1]). We used a setup where focal rats could pull food for a stooge in an adjacent compartment while being provided with odour cues from a hungry or satiated rat located in a different room.

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