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- Title
The founder sociality hypothesis.
- Authors
Brooks, James; Yamamoto, Shinya
- Abstract
In this review, we propose that the social dynamics of founder populations in novel and newly available environments can have critical effects in shaping species' sociality and can produce long‐lasting changes in social structure and behavior. For founder populations which expand into an underexploited niche separated from the parent population, the necessity of bond formation with strangers, lack of clear territories, and initial abundance of resources can lead to altered initial social dynamics to which subsequent generations adapt. We call this the founder sociality hypothesis. After specifying the theoretical reasoning and mechanism of effect, we focus on three particular cases where the social dynamics of founder populations may have a central role in explaining their modern behavioral ecology. In particular, we develop and review evidence for three predictions of the founder sociality hypothesis in territorial, mixed‐sex group forming species: relatively stronger social bonds in the dispersing sex with relatively weaker bonds in the nondispersing sex, reduced territoriality, and increased social tolerance. We briefly touch on the implications for human evolution given our species' evolutionary history marked by frequent expansion and adaptation to novel environments. We conclude by proposing several experiments and models with testable predictions following from the founder sociality hypothesis.
- Subjects
SOCIAL dynamics; SOCIAL bonds; SOCIAL change; HUMAN evolution; SOCIAL structure; TOUCH
- Publication
Ecology & Evolution (20457758), 2021, Vol 11, Issue 21, p14392
- ISSN
2045-7758
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/ece3.8143