Abstract: In some species, populations routinely contain a mixture of lone and group-living individuals. Such facultative sociality may reflect individual differences in behavior as well as adaptive responses to variation in local environmental conditions. To explore interactions between individual- and population-level variabilities in behavior in a species provisionally described as facultatively social, we examined spatial and social relationships within a population of highland tuco-tucos (Ctenomys opimus) at Laguna de los Pozuelos, Jujuy Province, Argentina. Using data collected over 5 consecutive years, we sought to (1) confirm the regular occurrence of both lone and group-living individuals and (2) characterize the temporal consisten...
The rodent suborder Caviomorpha comprises species with a diversity of social systems ranging from so...
Trabalho completo: acesso restrito, p. 105–112In a previous paper, we measured the affiliation betwe...
The importance of predation and burrow digging in explaining the evolution of sociality is generally...
An individual’s social environment can profoundly affect many aspects of their biology, including th...
Understanding habitat requirements has implications for numerous aspects of a species' biology, incl...
A pesar de la gran diversidad en el comportamiento social de los mamíferos, estudios sobre su organi...
For many species, a critical component of an animal's environment is its social setting, specificall...
Sociality (i.e., group-living) is a multi-dimensional aspect of behavior that occurs in many vertebr...
Intraspecific variation in sociality is thought to reflect a trade-off between current fitness bene...
Spatial relationships among conspecifics can provide insights into numerous aspects of social behavi...
Phylogenetic constraints and ecological factors have been suggested as alternative key factors in th...
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...
ABSTRACT. One aim in animal behaviour is to explain why and when animals live in groups. The main ap...
Sociality is environmentally and phylogenetically determined and can vary intraspecifically and inte...
The rodent suborder Caviomorpha comprises species with a diversity of social systems ranging from so...
Trabalho completo: acesso restrito, p. 105–112In a previous paper, we measured the affiliation betwe...
The importance of predation and burrow digging in explaining the evolution of sociality is generally...
An individual’s social environment can profoundly affect many aspects of their biology, including th...
Understanding habitat requirements has implications for numerous aspects of a species' biology, incl...
A pesar de la gran diversidad en el comportamiento social de los mamíferos, estudios sobre su organi...
For many species, a critical component of an animal's environment is its social setting, specificall...
Sociality (i.e., group-living) is a multi-dimensional aspect of behavior that occurs in many vertebr...
Intraspecific variation in sociality is thought to reflect a trade-off between current fitness bene...
Spatial relationships among conspecifics can provide insights into numerous aspects of social behavi...
Phylogenetic constraints and ecological factors have been suggested as alternative key factors in th...
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...
ABSTRACT. One aim in animal behaviour is to explain why and when animals live in groups. The main ap...
Sociality is environmentally and phylogenetically determined and can vary intraspecifically and inte...
The rodent suborder Caviomorpha comprises species with a diversity of social systems ranging from so...
Trabalho completo: acesso restrito, p. 105–112In a previous paper, we measured the affiliation betwe...
The importance of predation and burrow digging in explaining the evolution of sociality is generally...