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You can go your own way: No evidence for social behavior based on kinship or familiarity in captive juvenile box turtles

February 18, 2022

Behavioral interactions between conspecific animals can be influenced by relatedness and familiarity. Compared to other vertebrate taxa, considering such aspects of social behavior when housing captive reptiles has received less attention, despite the implications this could have for informing husbandry practices, enhancing welfare, and influencing outcomes of conservation translocations. In this study, to test how kinship and familiarity influenced social behavior in a reptile, we reared 16 captive-born Eastern Box Turtles (Terrapene carolina) under semi-natural conditions in four equally sized groups, where each group comprised pairs of siblings and non-siblings. Using separation distance between pairs of turtles in rearing enclosures as a measure of gregariousness, we found no evidence suggesting siblings more frequently interacted with one another compared to non-relatives over the first five months of life (β = -0.016, 95% CI: -0.117 to 0.084). Average pair separation distance decreased during this time (β = -0.146, 95% CI: -0.228 to -0.063) but may have been due to turtles aggregating around concentrated resources like heat and moist retreat areas as cold winter temperatures approached. When subject were eight months old, we measured repeated separation distances between unique pair combinations in an experimental environment and similarly found no support for gregariousness (associations) being influenced by kinship or familiarity (β = -1.554, 95% CI: -9.956 to 6.848). Additionally, differences in body size between pairs of turtles (β = -22.289, 95% CI: -68.448 to 23.870) nor the five-minute time interval during the 90-minute trial (P ≥ 0.18) had any apparent effect on associations. Agonistic interactions between individuals were never observed. Encouragingly, based on our results, group housing and rearing of juvenile box turtles did not appear to negatively impact their behavioral and physiological well-being. Unlike findings for other taxa, including some reptiles, our results suggest strategically housing groups of juvenile T. carolina to maintain social stability may not be an important husbandry consideration, or even a requirement, when planning releases of captive-reared individuals for conservation purposes.

Publication Year 2022
Title You can go your own way: No evidence for social behavior based on kinship or familiarity in captive juvenile box turtles
DOI 10.1016/j.applanim.2022.105586
Authors Sasha J. Tetzlaff, Jinelle H. Sperry, Brett Alexander DeGregorio
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Applied Animal Behaviour Science
Index ID 70256690
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coop Res Unit Atlanta