Group dominance increases territory size and reduces neighbour pressure in wild chimpanzees

Volume: 7, Issue: 5, Pages: 200577 - 200577
Published: May 1, 2020
Abstract
Territorial social species, including humans, compete between groups over key resources. This between-group competition has evolutionary implications on adaptations like in-group cooperation even with non-kin. An emergent property of between-group competition is group dominance. Mechanisms of group dominance in wild animal populations are difficult to study, as they require long-term data on several groups within a population. Here, using...
Paper Details
Title
Group dominance increases territory size and reduces neighbour pressure in wild chimpanzees
Published Date
May 1, 2020
Volume
7
Issue
5
Pages
200577 - 200577
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