Saturday, February 07, 2009

Long-Term Monitoring of Social Behavior in a Grouping of Six Female Tigers

Hey, I haven't highlighted any recent scholarly work that came out of Disney lately, which is the one thing that I try to do often on here. So here's one that came out of researchers from Disney's Animal Kingdom.

Long-term monitoring of social behavior in a grouping of six female tigers (Panthera tigris)

Angela Miller, Christopher W. Kuhar
Disney's Animal Kingdom, Lake Buena Vista, Florida

Zoo Biology
Volume 27 Issue 2, Pages 89 - 99 (2007)

Abstract: Although literature on the reproduction of captive tigers is plentiful, there is little information on other social behaviors, particularly within large social groupings. Here we report on the long-term monitoring of social behaviors in six female tigers (Panthera tigris). Over a period of 6 years, behavioral data were collected on spraying, vocalizations, non-contact aggression, and contact aggression during outdoor observations, as well as nearest neighbors in the morning, as a proxy measure of affiliation. Regression analyses showed that non-contact aggression and vocalizing were increasing, whereas spraying and social proximity were decreasing over the 6 years of the study. Paired t-tests showed no seasonal differences in aggression, but animals had higher social proximity scores during the mornings of the colder winter months. Correlations showed that spraying was positively related to contact aggression whereas social proximity was negatively correlated with non-contact aggression. In addition to documenting levels of contact and non-contact aggression over time, this study showed these behaviors correlated with behaviors that were more easily scored (spraying and social proximity). Behavioral monitoring has played a key role in the management and husbandry of this large social grouping of female tigers. In addition to providing keepers with the opportunity to observe their animals in regularly scheduled sessions, behavioral monitoring has provided baseline information on social relationships in this grouping over time. If future research validates the relationship between aggression and spraying/social proximity, this can be a valuable tool for long-term monitoring of groups of tigers.

Again, what theme parks would consistently produce scholarly works that get published in scientific journals?

Zz.

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