ABSTRACT. One aim in animal behaviour is to explain why and when animals live in groups. The main approach has been to compare closely related gregarious and solitary species. Here, I discuss data of a medium sized, diurnal muroid rodent, the striped mouse, which demonstrates a high level of intraspecific variability of its social system. In the arid Succulent Karoo, the social structure of the striped mouse is best described as a territorial group living sol-itary forager with communal breeding and helpers at the nest. Groups can consist of up to 30 adult mice, i.e. four breeding females, one breeding male and their adult offspring. In contrast, the striped mouse is solitary in the mesic grasslands of South Africa, with females inhabiting ...
We tested hypotheses based on philopatry, kinship, and ecological constraints to explain sociality i...
International audienceIn several mammal species, bachelor groups occur as a regular life history sta...
Understanding mammal social systems and behaviour can best be achieved through observations of indiv...
ABSTRACT. One aim in animal behaviour is to explain why and when animals live in groups. The main ap...
This thesis is submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, ...
International audienceSocial systems vary within and between species, ranging along a continuum betw...
Nest‐site selection is an important component of species socio‐ecology, being a crucial factor in es...
1. Social groups typically form due to delayed dispersal of adult offspring when no opportunities fo...
International audienceIndividual recognition, the ability to discriminate between members of a socia...
Sociality (i.e., group-living) is a multi-dimensional aspect of behavior that occurs in many vertebr...
International audienceThe social organization of species ranges from solitary-living to complex soci...
The resilience of an individual to environmental change depends on its ability to respond adaptively...
Sociality is environmentally and phylogenetically determined and can vary intraspecifically and inte...
We tested hypotheses based on philopatry, kinship, and ecological constraints to explain sociality i...
We tested hypotheses based on philopatry, kinship, and ecological constraints to explain sociality i...
International audienceIn several mammal species, bachelor groups occur as a regular life history sta...
Understanding mammal social systems and behaviour can best be achieved through observations of indiv...
ABSTRACT. One aim in animal behaviour is to explain why and when animals live in groups. The main ap...
This thesis is submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, ...
International audienceSocial systems vary within and between species, ranging along a continuum betw...
Nest‐site selection is an important component of species socio‐ecology, being a crucial factor in es...
1. Social groups typically form due to delayed dispersal of adult offspring when no opportunities fo...
International audienceIndividual recognition, the ability to discriminate between members of a socia...
Sociality (i.e., group-living) is a multi-dimensional aspect of behavior that occurs in many vertebr...
International audienceThe social organization of species ranges from solitary-living to complex soci...
The resilience of an individual to environmental change depends on its ability to respond adaptively...
Sociality is environmentally and phylogenetically determined and can vary intraspecifically and inte...
We tested hypotheses based on philopatry, kinship, and ecological constraints to explain sociality i...
We tested hypotheses based on philopatry, kinship, and ecological constraints to explain sociality i...
International audienceIn several mammal species, bachelor groups occur as a regular life history sta...
Understanding mammal social systems and behaviour can best be achieved through observations of indiv...