PERSONAL DE APOYO
CUELLO Pablo Andres
artículos
Título:
Multi-year assessment of variability in spatial and social relationships in a subterranean rodent, the highland tuco-tuco (Ctenomys opimus)
Autor/es:
OBRIEN, SHANNON L.; TAMMONE, MAURO N.; CUELLO, PABLO A.; LACEY, EILEEN A.
Revista:
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2021 vol. 75
ISSN:
0340-5443
Resumen:
In some species, populations routinely contain a mixture of lone and group-living individuals. Such facultative sociality may refect individual diferences 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 facultativelysocial, 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) confrm the regular occurrence of both lone and group-living individuals and (2) characterize the temporal consistency of individual social relationships. Ouranalyses revealed that although the study population typically contained lone as well as group-living animals, individual spatial and social relationships varied markedly over time. Specifcally, the extent to which individuals remained resident in the same location across years varied, as did the number of conspecifcs with which an animal lived, with an overall tendency for individuals to livein larger groups over successive years. Collectively, these analyses indicate that population-level patterns of behavior in C. opimus are consistent with facultative sociality but that this variation does not arise due to persistent diferences in individual behavior (i.e., living alone versus with conspecifcs). Instead, based on changes in spatial and social relationships across years, we suggest that variation in the tendency to live in groups is shaped primarily by local ecological and demographic conditions.