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Dynamic social networks in guppies (Poecilia reticulata)
Authors
A Sih
AB Sendova-Franks
+53 more
AE Magurran
AJ Lea
Alexander D. M. Wilson
B Blonder
BFJ Manly
C Perreault
D Lusseau
D Naug
Darren P. Croft
DB McDonald
DJ Watts
DP Croft
DP Croft
DP Croft
DP Croft
DP Croft
DP Croft
DP Croft
DW Franks
FC Santos
G Ramos-Fernandez
GG Kerth
Indar W. Ramnarine
J Krause
J Krause
J Krause
JBW Wolf
JC Flack
JE Herbert-Read
Jens Krause
JR Madden
Karoline K. Borner
KP Oh
N Eagle
N Marschall
N Pinter-Wollman
PC Cross
PC Lee
R Riesch
R Williams
Richard James
Romain J. G. Clement
S Boccaletti
SP Henzi
SP Henzi
SR Sundaresan
SS Godfrey
Stefan Krause
Sundaresan
T Wey
TAB Snijders
TL Guttridge
TW Pike
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
One of the main challenges in the study of social networks in vertebrates is to close the gap between group patterns and dynamics. Usually scan samples or transect data are recorded to provide information about social patterns of animals, but these techniques themselves do not shed much light on the underlying dynamics of such groups. Here we show an approach which captures the fission-fusion dynamics of a fish population in the wild and demonstrates how the gap between pattern and dynamics may be closed. Our analysis revealed that guppies have complex association patterns that are characterised by close strong connections between individuals of similar behavioural type. Intriguingly, the preference for particular social partners is not expressed in the length of associations but in their frequency. Finally, we show that the observed association preferences could have important consequences for transmission processes in animal social networks, thus moving the emphasis of network research from descriptive mechanistic studies to functional and predictive ones. © 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
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PEARL (Univ. of Plymouth)
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oai:pearl.plymouth.ac.uk:bms-r...
Last time updated on 10/10/2024
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1007%2Fs00265-014-...
Last time updated on 03/12/2019