Social niche shapes social behavior and cortisol concentrations during adolescence in female guinea pigs

ElsevierVolume 162, June 2024, 105539Hormones and BehaviorAuthor links open overlay panel, , , Highlights•

We manipulated the social niche of adolescent female guinea pigs.

Aggressive behavior was immediately adjusted to a new social niche.

Cortisol responsiveness changed over time after a social niche transition.

Past social interactions affected dominance interactions with a different individual.

The social niche during adolescence shaped behavior and cortisol responsiveness.

Abstract

Individualized social niches arise in social groups, resulting in divergent social behavior profiles among group members. During sensitive life phases, the individualized social niche can profoundly impact the development of social behavior and associated phenotypes such as hormone (e.g. cortisol) concentrations. Focusing on adolescence, we investigated the relationship between the individualized social niche, social behavior, and cortisol concentrations (baseline and responsiveness) in female guinea pigs. Females were pair-housed in early adolescence (initial social pair formation), and a social niche transition was induced after six weeks by replacing the partner with either a larger or smaller female. Regarding social behavior, dominance status was associated with aggression in both the initial social pairs and after the social niche transition, and the results suggest that aggression was rapidly and completely reshaped after the social niche transition. Meanwhile, submissive behavior was rapidly reshaped after the social niche transition, but this was incomplete. The dominance status attained in the initial social pair affected the extent of submissive behavior after the social niche transition, and this effect was still detected three weeks after the social niche transition. Regarding cortisol concentrations, higher baseline cortisol concentrations were measured in dominant females in the initial social pairs. After the social niche transition, cortisol responsiveness significantly increased for the females paired with a larger, older female relative to those paired with a smaller, younger female. These findings demonstrate that the social niche during adolescence plays a significant role in shaping behavior and hormone concentrations in females.

Keywords

Social status

Individual variation

Cortisol reactivity

Phenotypic plasticity

Social environment

Individualized niche

Endocrine flexibility

Niche specialization

Stress response

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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