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ANIMAL CHRONICLES: Copycat goats steer clear of consensus in commutes

One moment a herd of goats is milling around, casually browsing the scrubby grass. The next, their long ears twitch and their wide golden eyes stare as they trot off purposefully, picking up speed as they appear to rush intently to a specific destination.

ANIMAL CHRONICLES: Copycat goats steer clear of consensus in commutes
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They’re exhibiting a behaviour that scientists have long watched in herding, flocking and schooling animals from baboons to fish. It looks like the goats have cast their votes and decided together which way to go.

How creatures in the animal kingdom come to a decision together is a subject of perennial interest. Among some species, individuals do weigh in. Members of meerkat troops make calls and African wild dogs sneeze before the group moves, and they will only set off when enough individuals have had their say. It’s even been posited that African buffalo vote with their movements, with animals pointing themselves toward the way they want to go and the herd choosing the average of all their directions. It’s difficult for a human observer to tell the difference between forays directed by silent voting and ones where animals copy whatever their closest compatriots are doing, the way schooling fish do. Using collars equipped with GPS and other sensors, biologists watched a small herd of Namibian goats to see if their behaviour suggested one tactic or the other. In a paper in the journal Royal Society Open Science, they report that the goats do not seem to be voting.

If animals decide ahead of time which way to go, there should be a lag between when the majority orient themselves in the direction of travel and when they set off, said Andrew King, who studies animal behaviour at Swansea University in Wales and is an author of the new paper. But it can be difficult for researchers to pinpoint the moments that matter.

“If you just sat in the field with a notebook, you couldn’t do it, because you don’t know when they’re going to leave,” he said. He and his colleagues have developed collars containing GPS equipment as well as accelerometers and magnetometers that track which way animals are facing, when they start to move together and where they finally end up. They put the collars on 16 domesticated goats at the Tsaobis Nature Park in Namibia and collected data as they roamed over 10 days. With this information, they could backtrack to just before the group left a given location and determine which moment they turned to face their destination. If voting were happening, the goats would orient themselves before the movement began. A majority might face the direction they eventually move in, or the direction might be an average of their positions. In each situation, there would be a delay before the goats acted on the decision. Instead, what the researchers saw was that the goats did not start facing their destination until the very moment they were leaving. That implied that one goat would start moving, its nearest neighbours would turn to follow it, and their nearest neighbours would do the same, a behaviour the researchers call copying. That meant that the goats’ orientation before a foray did not predict which way they ended up going.

The researchers built a model to simulate what the goats’ movement would look like if they were voting versus merely copying. Some virtual goat herds were programmed to copy their neighbours, while others voted with their positions. The researchers found that what the goats did in real life looked a lot more like the copycat herds, suggesting that the animals do not need to do anything more than mimic their companions to move as a group.

Greenwood is a reporter with NYT

The New York Times

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