Abstract

The social transmission of food preference (STFP) is a phenomenon that allows rodents to use food information perceived from their conspecifics to guide their own food choices. This social information can be collected via olfactory cues, during direct social interactions, or indirectly, via faeces left in the environment by individuals. Although reducing the risks associated with a social confrontation, faeces also convey different types of information about traits and states of individuals which could affect the indirect STFP. Here, we evaluated in the house mouse, Mus musculus domesticus, which conspecifics could be good providers of food cues for indirect STFP. Our results indicated that female mice acquire an indirect STFP from faeces of adult females, familiar or not and from faeces of adult unfamiliar males. On the contrary, males do not establish an indirect STFP from faeces of males, whether they are familiar or not, nor from those of unfamiliar females. Indirect STFP was however effective in males when the faeces were those of an unfamiliar juvenile male. A prior habituation to the odour of an unfamiliar female allowed the establishment of indirect STFP in males. Conversely, the presence of faeces of another adult male during the presentation of faeces of an accustomed female precluded the acquisition of indirect STFP in males. This study suggested that in the context of the indirect STFP, females prioritize socio-olfactory information relative to food, whereas food cues were not priority information for males. Under these conditions, females appear to be the best vectors for disseminating food information within the population. These results are discussed according to the socio-spatial organization of the species.

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