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- Title
Complex social structure of southern flying squirrels is related to spatial proximity but not kinship.
- Authors
Garroway, Colin; Bowman, Jeff; Wilson, Paul
- Abstract
Social individuals have organized relationships that affect fitness and so a species' tendency to be social has important implications for its population ecology, gene flow, and its distribution in space and time. We quantitatively examined the social structure of southern flying squirrels ( Glaucomys volans) and tested for a role of kinship and prior familiarity in predicting social structure. To quantify social structure, we monitored nest group composition of southern flying squirrels. All squirrels at the study site were marked with passive integrated transponder (PIT) tags and nest cavity entrances were monitored with automated PIT tag recorders for a period of 28 months. Squirrels were genotyped at eight microsatellite loci. Permutation tests of associations suggested that individuals nested with other specific individuals more often than expected by chance. The lagged association rate indicated that relationships were stable and persisted across seasons and years. Multiple summer nest associates came together in winter to form larger nest groups which were likely important for social thermoregulation. A measure of prior familiarity, but not kinship, was related to the proportion of time individuals nested together during winter. We suggest that the evolution of sociality in southern flying squirrels is driven largely by mutually beneficial behaviors related to social thermoregulation although other, as of yet, unidentified mechanisms are needed to explain sociality in the warm season. We hypothesize that minimum group size requirements associated with social thermoregulation could explain the absence of this species in patchy landscapes and aspects of range boundary dynamics near their northern range boundary.
- Subjects
SOUTHERN flying squirrel; SOCIAL structure; ANIMAL social behavior; PERMUTATIONS; MICROSATELLITE repeats; ANIMAL ecology; ANIMAL populations; ANIMAL behavior
- Publication
Behavioral Ecology & Sociobiology, 2013, Vol 67, Issue 1, p113
- ISSN
0340-5443
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00265-012-1431-3