INVESTIGADORES
TAMMONE Mauro Nicolas
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Burrow sharing in tuco-tucos: new opportunities for understanding sociality
Autor/es:
LACEY, EILEEN; CUELLO, PABLO; WOODRUFF, JULIE; TAMMONE, MAURO; WIECZOREK, JOHN
Reunión:
Congreso; Behavior 2011 Joint meeting of the Animal Behavior Society and the International Ethological Conference; 2011
Resumen:
Independently evolved examples of group living provide valuable opportunities to test hypotheses regarding the adaptive bases for social behavior. Although rodents in the genus Ctenomys are geographically widespread and often locally abundant, quantitative evidence of group living in these animals has - until now - been limited to a single species, the colonial tuco-tuco (C. sociabilis). Here, we demonstrate that the highland tuco-tuco (C. opimus) is also social. Our field studies indicate that multiple adult C. opimus share the same burrow system and nest site. Unlike C. sociabilis, however, group mates display only partial spatial overlap with one another and groups are not characterized by discrete spatial boundaries. Based on these data, the social structure of C. opimus appears to be intermediate between that of C. sociabilis and strictly solitary species of tuco-tucos. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that C. sociabilis and C. opimus represent evolutionarily independent examples of group living, making them ideal for comparative studies of the proximate and ultimate bases for differences in social behavior.