A test of the social cohesion hypothesis: interactive female marmots remain at home
Abstract
Individuals frequently leave home before reaching reproductive age, but the proximate causes of natal dispersal remain relatively unknown. The social cohesion hypothesis predicts that individuals who engage in more (affiliative) interactions are less likely to disperse. Despite the intuitive nature of this hypothesis, support is both limited and equivocal. We used formal social network analyses to quantify precisely both direct and indirect measures of social cohesion in yellow-bellied marmots. Because approximately 50 per cent of female yearlings disperse, we expected that social relationships and network measures of cohesion would predict dispersal. By contrast, because most male yearlings disperse, we expected that social relationships and cohesion would play a less important role. We found that female yearlings that interacted with more individuals, and those that were more socially embedded in their groups, were less likely to disperse. For males, social interactions were relatively unimportant determinants of dispersal. This is the first strong support for the social cohesion hypothesis and suggests that the specific nature of social relationships, not simply the number of affiliative relationships, may influence the propensity to disperse.
Local Knowledge Graph (21 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Social network analysis of animal behaviour: a promising tool for the study of sociality
Extending the social cohesion hypothesis: Is group cohesion associated with dispersal?
Social cohesion in yellow-bellied marmots is established through age and kin structuring
Marmot mass gain rates relate to their group’s social structure
Data from: Strong social relationships are associated with decreased longevity in a facultatively social mammal
Data from: A cost of being amicable in a hibernating marmot
An Ecological Basis for Beaver Management in the Rocky Mountain Region
Small Mammals: A Beaver Pond Ecosystem and Adjacent Riparian Habitat in Idaho
Beavers in North Elk Meadows
Cited By (147 times, 50 in Knowledge Hub)
Is the propensity to alarm-call heritable and related across multiple contexts?
Multilevel selection on individual and group social behaviour in the wild
Is social plasticity good? Does lifetime social variation enhance LRS and longevity in yellow-bellied marmots?
Sick and alone? Evaluating how immune response is associated with social network position in yellow-bellied marmots
Does rainfall or temperature influence antipredator vigilance in a hibernating mammal?
Costly calling: Marmots who alarm call at higher rates are less likely to survive the summer and live shorter lives
Timing of seasonal events is correlated with social network position in a wild mammal
Differences in gut microbes across age and sex linked to metabolism and microbial stability in a wild hibernating mammal
Extending the social cohesion hypothesis: is group social structure associated with dispersal in yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventer)?
Social security: Does social position influence flight initiation distance?
The social microbiome: gut microbiome diversity and abundance are negatively associated with sociality in a wild mammal
Emergent social structure is typically not associated with survival in a facultatively social mammal
Agonistic and affiliative social relationships are associated with marmot docility but not boldness
The (surprising) importance of males in a matrilineal society: behavioural insights from a topological knockout study
Extending the social cohesion hypothesis: Is group cohesion associated with dispersal?
Social security: Does social position influence flight initiation distance?
Evolution of social position and structure – a multilevel selection perspective
Marmot mass gain rates relate to their group’s social structure
The social microbiome: the relationship between the microbiome and sociality in a wild mammal
Producer-scrounger relationships in yellow-bellied marmots
Bigger is not always better: Viability selection on body mass varies across life stages in a hibernating mammal
How social behaviour and life-history traits change with age and in the year prior to death in female yellow-bellied marmots
The benefits of being dominant: Health correlates of male social rank and age in a marmot
Social position indirectly influences the traits yellow-bellied marmots use to solve problems
Relationships matter: How the social environment affects individual fitness-related behaviors
More social female yellow-bellied marmots, <i>Marmota flaviventer</i>, have enhanced summer survival
Density effects on juvenile female dispersal in a population of golden-mantled ground squirrels
Gene expression shifts in yellow-bellied marmots prior to natal dispersal
Social security: less socially connected marmots produce noisier alarm calls
Mixed support for state maintaining risky personality traits in yellow-bellied marmots
Correlates of maternal glucocorticoid levels in a socially flexible rodent
Transitivity and structural balance in marmot social networks
Social transmission of a novel foraging trait in yellow-bellied marmots
Strong social relationships are associated with decreased longevity in a facultatively social mammal
More social female yellow-bellied marmots have enhanced summer survival
Social Security: social relationship strength and connectedness influence how marmots respond to alarm calls
Social security: are socially connected individuals less vigilant?
Genetic basis of between-individual and within-individual variance of docility
The effect of maternal glucocorticoid levels on juvenile docility in yellow-bellied marmots
A cost of being amicable in a hibernating marmot.
Is Compensatory Growth Costly?
Fitness and hormonal correlates of social and ecological stressors of female yellow-bellied marmots.
Social security: Are socially connected individuals less vigilant?
Are social attributes associated with alarm calling propensity?
Group size affects social relationships in yellow-bellied marmots <i>(Marmota flaviventris)</i>
Environmentally induced phenotypic variation in wild yellow-bellied marmots
Do yellow-bellied marmots perceive enhanced predation risk when they are farther from safety?: an experimental study
Exploring the behavioral rules influencing sociality in a facultatively social species, yellow-bellied marmots
The causes and maintenance of personality in yellow-bellied marmots (<i>Marmota flaviventris</i>)
Yellow-bellied marmots: insights from an emergent view of sociality.
References (38)
6 in Knowledge Hub, 32 external
