Christopher X J. Jensen
Associate Professor, Pratt Institute

Cooperative child-rearing pays dividends for ruffed lemurs, irrespective of kinship

Posted 23 Aug 2013 / 0

Mongabay NewsThe evolution of cooperation: communal nests are best for ruffed lemurs

Behavioral Ecology and SociobiologyCommunal nesting, kinship, and maternal success in a social primate

What I find particularly interesting about these findings is that they appear to show that kinship — if a factor at all — might well be a byproduct of spatial proximity. Clearly regulated reciprocity is all that is required for these lemurs’ cooperative parenting scheme to work.

A Minor Post, Articles, Behavioral Ecology, Cooperation, Kin Selection, Mating systems, Mutualism, Reciprocity, Reproductive Fitness, Tropical Forest, Web

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