Social vertebrates commonly form foraging groups whose members repeatedly interact with one another and are often genetically related. Many species also exhibit within-population specializations, which can range from preferences to forage in particular areas through to specializing on the type of prey they catch. However, within-population structure in foraging groups, behavioral homogeneity in foraging behavior, and relatedness could be outcomes of behavioral interactions rather than underlying drivers. We present a simple process by which grouping among foragers emerges and is maintained across generations. We introduce agent-based models to investigate (1) whether a simple rule (keep foraging with the same individuals when you were succe...
Bacteria, eukaryotic cells, multicellular organisms, animals, and even humans forage to find resourc...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
<div><p>Although simple social structures are more common in animal societies, some taxa (mainly mam...
Social vertebrates commonly form foraging groups whose members repeatedly interact with one another ...
Social vertebrates commonly form foraging groups whose members repeatedly interact with one another ...
Background: Why individuals breed in groups and why patterns of group breeding are so variable are l...
Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary trajectories. However, it remains ...
<div><p>Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary trajectories. However, it ...
Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary trajectories. However, it remains ...
The dynamics of resource patches and species that exploit such patches are of interest to ecologists...
Background: Many animals live in groups. One proposed reason is that grouping allows cooperative foo...
In animal societies, kin selection is a critical evolutionary process, with cooperation evolving pri...
Although simple social structures are more common in animal societies, some taxa (mainly mammals) ha...
Social foraging theory suggests that group-living animals gain from persistent social bonds, which l...
Social organization among human foragers is characterized by a three-generational system of resource...
Bacteria, eukaryotic cells, multicellular organisms, animals, and even humans forage to find resourc...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
<div><p>Although simple social structures are more common in animal societies, some taxa (mainly mam...
Social vertebrates commonly form foraging groups whose members repeatedly interact with one another ...
Social vertebrates commonly form foraging groups whose members repeatedly interact with one another ...
Background: Why individuals breed in groups and why patterns of group breeding are so variable are l...
Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary trajectories. However, it remains ...
<div><p>Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary trajectories. However, it ...
Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary trajectories. However, it remains ...
The dynamics of resource patches and species that exploit such patches are of interest to ecologists...
Background: Many animals live in groups. One proposed reason is that grouping allows cooperative foo...
In animal societies, kin selection is a critical evolutionary process, with cooperation evolving pri...
Although simple social structures are more common in animal societies, some taxa (mainly mammals) ha...
Social foraging theory suggests that group-living animals gain from persistent social bonds, which l...
Social organization among human foragers is characterized by a three-generational system of resource...
Bacteria, eukaryotic cells, multicellular organisms, animals, and even humans forage to find resourc...
The evolution of cooperation often depends upon population structure, yet nearly all models of coope...
<div><p>Although simple social structures are more common in animal societies, some taxa (mainly mam...