SummarySocial relationships are fundamental to animals living in complex societies [1–3]. The extent to which individuals base their decisions around their key social relationships, and the consequences this has on their behavior and broader population level processes, remains unknown. Using a novel experiment that controlled where individual wild birds (great tits, Parus major) could access food, we restricted mated pairs from being allowed to forage at the same locations. This introduced a conflict for pair members between maintaining social relationships and accessing resources. We show that individuals reduce their own access to food in order to sustain their relationships and that individual foraging activity was strongly influenced by...
Our current understanding of animal social networks is largely based on observations or experiments ...
Our current understanding of animal social networks is largely based on observations or experiments ...
Foraging in groups provides many benefits but also carries costs, such as competition. Social indivi...
Ecological factors are known to influence the spatial distribution of individuals, which in turn gov...
Ecological factors are known to influence the spatial distribution of individuals, which in turn gov...
Social interactions are important for many aspects of the life-history of group-living species. Yet ...
Social behaviour is shaped by complex relationships between evolutionary and ecological processes in...
How individual animals divide their time between activities such as feeding, predator vigilance, res...
In social groups, individuals' dominance rank, social bonds, and kinship with other group members ha...
How individual animals divide their time between activities such as feeding, predator vigilance, res...
Understanding the consequences of losing individuals from wild populations is a current and pressing...
Understanding the consequences of losing individuals from wild populations is a current and pressing...
There is increasing evidence that animal groups can maintain coordinated behaviour and make collecti...
Journal ArticleOpen access articleIn social groups, individuals' dominance rank, social bonds, and k...
When the consequences of sociality differ depending on the state of individual animals and the exper...
Our current understanding of animal social networks is largely based on observations or experiments ...
Our current understanding of animal social networks is largely based on observations or experiments ...
Foraging in groups provides many benefits but also carries costs, such as competition. Social indivi...
Ecological factors are known to influence the spatial distribution of individuals, which in turn gov...
Ecological factors are known to influence the spatial distribution of individuals, which in turn gov...
Social interactions are important for many aspects of the life-history of group-living species. Yet ...
Social behaviour is shaped by complex relationships between evolutionary and ecological processes in...
How individual animals divide their time between activities such as feeding, predator vigilance, res...
In social groups, individuals' dominance rank, social bonds, and kinship with other group members ha...
How individual animals divide their time between activities such as feeding, predator vigilance, res...
Understanding the consequences of losing individuals from wild populations is a current and pressing...
Understanding the consequences of losing individuals from wild populations is a current and pressing...
There is increasing evidence that animal groups can maintain coordinated behaviour and make collecti...
Journal ArticleOpen access articleIn social groups, individuals' dominance rank, social bonds, and k...
When the consequences of sociality differ depending on the state of individual animals and the exper...
Our current understanding of animal social networks is largely based on observations or experiments ...
Our current understanding of animal social networks is largely based on observations or experiments ...
Foraging in groups provides many benefits but also carries costs, such as competition. Social indivi...