Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States of America.
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Jun 7;19(6):e0304763. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304763. eCollection 2024.
Identifying the factors that favor group living is central to studies of animal social behavior. One demographic parameter that is expected to substantially shape spatial and social relationships is population density. Specifically, high population densities may favor group living by constraining opportunities to live alone. In contrast, low densities may allow individuals to spread out within the habitat, leading to a reduction in the prevalence or size of social groups. Abrupt changes in density following natural catastrophic events provide important opportunities to evaluate the effects of population density on patterns of spatial and social organization. As part of long-term studies of the behavioral ecology of a population of highland tuco-tucos (Ctenomys opimus) at Monumento Natural Laguna de los Pozuelos, Jujuy Province, Argentina, we monitored the demographic and behavioral consequences of a flood that inundated our study site during December 2012. Unlike most species of Ctenomys studied to date, highland tuco-tucos are group living, meaning that multiple adults share burrow systems and nest sites. Despite a post-flood reduction in population density of ~75%, animals present on the study site during the 2013 breeding season continued to live in multi-adult social units (groups). No differences between pre- and post-flood home range sizes were detected and although between-unit spatial overlap was reduced in 2013, overlap within social units did not differ from that in pre-flood years. Animals assigned to the same social unit in 2013 had not lived together during 2012, indicating that post-flood groups were not simply the remnants of those present prior to the flood. Collectively, these findings indicate that group living in highland tuco-tucos is not driven by the density of conspecifics in the habitat. In addition to enhancing understanding of the adaptive bases for group living in Ctenomys, our analyses underscore the power of catastrophic events to generate insights into fundamental aspects of social behavior.
确定有利于群体生活的因素是动物社会行为研究的核心。一个预计会极大地影响空间和社会关系的人口参数是种群密度。具体来说,高密度可能通过限制独居机会来促进群体生活。相比之下,低密度可能允许个体在栖息地内扩散,从而减少社会群体的出现或规模。自然灾难性事件后密度的急剧变化为评估种群密度对空间和社会组织模式的影响提供了重要机会。作为对阿根廷胡胡伊省纪念碑自然拉古纳·德洛斯波苏埃洛斯高地图库图科(Ctenomys opimus)种群行为生态学的长期研究的一部分,我们监测了 2012 年 12 月淹没我们研究地点的洪水对种群密度的影响。与迄今为止研究的大多数 Ctenomys 物种不同,高地图库图科是群居的,这意味着多个成年个体共享洞穴系统和巢穴。尽管洪水后种群密度下降了约 75%,但在 2013 年繁殖季节出现在研究地点的动物仍继续生活在多成年社会群体中。没有发现洪水前后的巢穴范围大小存在差异,尽管 2013 年的个体间空间重叠减少了,但社会群体内的重叠与洪水前年份没有差异。2013 年被分配到同一社会群体的动物在 2012 年没有一起生活过,这表明洪水后的群体并不是洪水前存在的群体的残余。总的来说,这些发现表明,高地图库图科的群居生活不是由栖息地内同物种的密度驱动的。除了增强对 Ctenomys 群居生活适应基础的理解外,我们的分析还强调了灾难性事件在产生对社会行为基本方面的见解方面的力量。