Food sharing offers a clear example of prosocial behaviour, in which one individual's actions benefit another. Researchers have proposed a range of hypotheses that explain why food sharing may occur among unrelated individuals. Two such hypotheses, reciprocity and dominance, have been tested in many species, including fish, corvids, rats, bats and primates, showing that (1) recipients sometimes reciprocate sharing back to previous donors and (2) dominant individuals share more than subordinates. Although primates dominate the study of prosocial behaviour, active donation of food is actually quite rare in primates. In contrast, several corvid species spontaneously share food much more frequently. Here, we explored the role of reciprocity and...
Food sharing (FS) in cooperatively breeding callitrichids is unusual among nonhuman primates because...
Observations of food sharing behavior in golden lion marmosets are reported and three categories of ...
In recent years, we have investigated the possibility that Eurasian jay food sharing might rely on d...
Food sharing offers a clear example of prosocial behaviour, in which one individual's actions benefi...
Food sharing offers a clear example of prosocial behavior, in which one individual’s actions benefit...
Many species exhibit prosocial behavior, in which one individual’s actions benefit another individua...
Accounts of food sharing within natural populations of mammals have focused on transfers to offsprin...
Prosociality is considered one of the driving forces for cooperation in human and animal societies. ...
Little evidence of calculated reciprocity has been found in non-human primates so far. In this study...
The cooperative breeding hypothesis posits that cooperatively breeding species are motivated to act ...
Primate sociality has received much attention and its complexity has been viewed as a driving force ...
This study examines the impact of social dominance in prosocial food giving tasks in conjunction wit...
Common vampire bats often regurgitate food to roost-mates that fail to feed. The original explanatio...
Accounts of food sharing within natural populations of mammals have focused on transfers to offsprin...
Debate about evolutionary pathways to sociality has focused on the importance of genetic relatedness...
Food sharing (FS) in cooperatively breeding callitrichids is unusual among nonhuman primates because...
Observations of food sharing behavior in golden lion marmosets are reported and three categories of ...
In recent years, we have investigated the possibility that Eurasian jay food sharing might rely on d...
Food sharing offers a clear example of prosocial behaviour, in which one individual's actions benefi...
Food sharing offers a clear example of prosocial behavior, in which one individual’s actions benefit...
Many species exhibit prosocial behavior, in which one individual’s actions benefit another individua...
Accounts of food sharing within natural populations of mammals have focused on transfers to offsprin...
Prosociality is considered one of the driving forces for cooperation in human and animal societies. ...
Little evidence of calculated reciprocity has been found in non-human primates so far. In this study...
The cooperative breeding hypothesis posits that cooperatively breeding species are motivated to act ...
Primate sociality has received much attention and its complexity has been viewed as a driving force ...
This study examines the impact of social dominance in prosocial food giving tasks in conjunction wit...
Common vampire bats often regurgitate food to roost-mates that fail to feed. The original explanatio...
Accounts of food sharing within natural populations of mammals have focused on transfers to offsprin...
Debate about evolutionary pathways to sociality has focused on the importance of genetic relatedness...
Food sharing (FS) in cooperatively breeding callitrichids is unusual among nonhuman primates because...
Observations of food sharing behavior in golden lion marmosets are reported and three categories of ...
In recent years, we have investigated the possibility that Eurasian jay food sharing might rely on d...