Sociality in molerats
- 31 December 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 74 (4) , 600-606
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00380059
Abstract
The foraging behaviour and diets of the various bathyergid molerat species are reviewed briefly, and inferences are drawn concerning their dietary specialisation. A simple model has been constructed which investigates the risks of unproductive foraging by specialist feeders as a function of resource dispersion characteristics and group size. The model suggests that the principal benefit of group foraging is a reduction in foraging risk, rather than increased resource procurement per se. Meeting the energetic costs of non-workers in social groups necessitates a reduction of the total energetic expenditure of the colony. This is achieved by reducing body size, huddling in the nest, and scaling mass-specific resting metabolic rate virtually independent of mass.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Avoiding inbreeding: at what cost?Published by Elsevier ,2004
- INBREEDING AS A STRATEGY IN SUBDIVIDED POPULATIONSEvolution, 1986
- The burrow systems and burrowing dynamics of the mole‐rats Bathyergus suillus and Cryptomys hottentotus in the fynbos of the south‐western Cape, South AfricaJournal of Zoology, 1986
- Bioenergetics and Distribution of Fossorial Spalacopus cyanus (Rodentia): Thermal Stress, or Cost of BurrowingPhysiological Zoology, 1986
- Foraging juncos: interaction of reward mean and variabilityAnimal Behaviour, 1985
- Risk-Sensitivity and Foraging GroupsEcology, 1981
- An empirical demonstration of risk-sensitive foraging preferencesAnimal Behaviour, 1980
- On Foraging Time Allocation in a Stochastic EnvironmentEcology, 1980
- Ecological Determinants of Group Sizes of Foraging LionsThe American Naturalist, 1975
- Finch flocks in the Mohave DesertTheoretical Population Biology, 1971