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Visual inputs are important for navigation, and several studies have investigated its importance in ants in the context of foraging. Little is known about the importance of visual cues when the whole colony engages in the goal‐oriented task of colony relocation. In this study, we investigated the role of vision for a tandem‐running tropical ant Diacamma indicum during colony relocation by impairing...
Internally fertilized animals are characterized by the transfer of their spermatozoa during copulation. However, the duration of copulation is highly variable, which suggests that they may serve for other functions apart from spermatozoa transfer. For example, during copulation, males can stimulate the female by using genitalic movements and/or by positioning their spermatozoa adequately within the...
In species that live in stable groups, successful management of time budget (i.e., the proportion of time involved in different behaviours) and social relationships has been proposed to be a key variable affecting individual fitness. Such management is limited by time constraints, which are group size and season dependancy. However, the link between time budget constraints and grooming patterns as...
Female preference is widely described in various taxa, and the underlying mechanisms shaping preferences remain a major focus of sexual selection studies, particularly in species where males contribute minimally to offspring. Female preference is associated with maintaining male secondary sexual traits (SST). However, how male SST impact female preference is less‐understood. We hypothesized the strength...
Animals in urban areas that experience frequent exposure to humans often behave differently than those in less urban areas, such as exhibiting less vigilance or anti‐predator behavior. These behavioral shifts may be an adaptive response to urbanization, but it may be costly if animals in urban areas also exhibit reduced anti‐predator behavior in the presence of natural predators. In trials with only...
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Fox squirrels (Sciurus niger) live in urban and suburban areas across parts of North America. They are active year round, consuming a variety of seeds, nuts, and fruits, and seem to thrive in areas with high levels of human activity. Photograph taken on the campus of the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA) and reproduced by permission of Ben Dantzer.
Brood parasites lay their eggs in the nests of other females, thereby shifting the costs of offspring care onto others. Given that care is costly, potential hosts should evolve mechanisms to avoid brood parasitism. Meanwhile, brood parasites should evolve mechanisms to circumvent host defences. Here we investigate whether hosts or intraspecific brood parasites adjust their egg laying behaviour as...
Communication is generally assumed to be the domain of conspecific signallers and receivers that produce reliable signals and respond adaptively. However, interactions between coexisting species can be surprisingly complex, suggesting that animals not only perceive but also selectively respond to signals produced by other species. Many species respond to the vocalisations of heterospecifics, but it...
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