TY - CHAP
T1 - Wall-following behavior
T2 - Its ultimate and proximate explanations, prevalence, and implications
AU - Scharf, Inon
AU - Farji-Brener, Alejandro
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024
PY - 2024/1
Y1 - 2024/1
N2 - Wall-following behavior is the movement along a wall exhibited by various animals. It is a conserved behavior among taxa, from unicellular organisms to humans, prone to selection pressure, and it is energetically cheap since it provides a homogenous trail and can help animals to follow the shortest distance between two points. There are three sets of explanations for this behavior. The first is that it is a defensive behavior meant to lead the animal to shelter or reduce predation risk, and which, at least in vertebrates, is a proxy of anxiety. The second explanation suggests it is an exploratory behavior, helping an animal either to exit an enclosed space or to orient in a novel (unfamiliar) environment, especially when vision is limited. As novel environments often induce stress, these two explanations are not mutually exclusive. Finally, the wall itself may offer some desired biotic or abiotic conditions, such as a higher prey availability moving along it or favorable microclimate conditions. Wall following is a variable behavior, easily affected by the test conditions, such as the test arena size (e.g., more in smaller arenas), shape, and illumination level. Standardization of its measurement is required to facilitate comparison among studies and species. The timing of examination plays a role too: Wall following often changes along development and with aging. Generally, females follow walls more often than do males. Furthermore, certain conditions experienced at a young age affect wall-following later, so the behavioral changes may be long-lasting. Wall following is correlated with a few other behaviors, such as a negative correlation with phototaxis and activity. We end our review by presenting some future research directions, such as examining wall-following behavior in predator-prey systems, examining whether and when wall-following is adaptive, and studying it in the context of urban ecology. Finally, there is a need to examine how common this behavior is in the wild as most studies have been conducted in the lab.
AB - Wall-following behavior is the movement along a wall exhibited by various animals. It is a conserved behavior among taxa, from unicellular organisms to humans, prone to selection pressure, and it is energetically cheap since it provides a homogenous trail and can help animals to follow the shortest distance between two points. There are three sets of explanations for this behavior. The first is that it is a defensive behavior meant to lead the animal to shelter or reduce predation risk, and which, at least in vertebrates, is a proxy of anxiety. The second explanation suggests it is an exploratory behavior, helping an animal either to exit an enclosed space or to orient in a novel (unfamiliar) environment, especially when vision is limited. As novel environments often induce stress, these two explanations are not mutually exclusive. Finally, the wall itself may offer some desired biotic or abiotic conditions, such as a higher prey availability moving along it or favorable microclimate conditions. Wall following is a variable behavior, easily affected by the test conditions, such as the test arena size (e.g., more in smaller arenas), shape, and illumination level. Standardization of its measurement is required to facilitate comparison among studies and species. The timing of examination plays a role too: Wall following often changes along development and with aging. Generally, females follow walls more often than do males. Furthermore, certain conditions experienced at a young age affect wall-following later, so the behavioral changes may be long-lasting. Wall following is correlated with a few other behaviors, such as a negative correlation with phototaxis and activity. We end our review by presenting some future research directions, such as examining wall-following behavior in predator-prey systems, examining whether and when wall-following is adaptive, and studying it in the context of urban ecology. Finally, there is a need to examine how common this behavior is in the wild as most studies have been conducted in the lab.
KW - Edge preference
KW - Life history
KW - Movement
KW - Risk-taking
KW - Stress
KW - Thigmotaxis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186684460&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/bs.asb.2024.02.003
DO - 10.1016/bs.asb.2024.02.003
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AN - SCOPUS:85186684460
SN - 9780443294402
T3 - Advances in the Study of Behavior
SP - 1
EP - 49
BT - Advances in Applied Microbiology
A2 - Podos, Jeffrey
A2 - Healy, Susan
PB - Academic Press Inc.
ER -