Friendship across species borders: factors that facilitate and constrain heterospecific sociality

Sridhar, Hari ; Guttal, Vishwesha (2018) Friendship across species borders: factors that facilitate and constrain heterospecific sociality Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 373 (1746). p. 20170014. ISSN 0962-8436

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2017.0014

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2017.0014

Abstract

Our understanding of animal sociality is based almost entirely on single-species sociality. Heterospecific sociality, although documented in numerous taxa and contexts, remains at the margins of sociality research and is rarely investigated in conjunction with single-species sociality. This could be because heterospecific and single-species sociality are thought to be based on fundamentally different mechanisms. However, our literature survey shows that heterospecific sociality based on mechanisms similar to single-species sociality is reported from many taxa, contexts and for various benefits. Therefore, we propose a conceptual framework to understand conspecific versus heterospecific social partner choice. Previous attempts, which are all in the context of social information, model partner choice as a trade-off between information benefit and competition cost, along a single phenotypic distance axis. Our framework of partner choice considers both direct grouping benefits and information benefits, allows heterospecific and conspecific partners to differ in degree and qualitatively, and uses a multi-dimensional trait space analysis of costs (competition and activity matching) and benefits (relevance of partner and quality of partner). We conclude that social partner choice is best-viewed as a continuum: some social benefits are obtainable only from conspecifics, some only from dissimilar heterospecifics, while many are potentially obtainable from conspecifics and heterospecifics. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Collective movement ecology'.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to The Royal Society.
Keywords:collective animal behaviour; group living; interspecific interaction; mixed-species group; social partner choice.
ID Code:142671
Deposited On:17 Mar 2026 12:06
Last Modified:17 Mar 2026 12:26

Repository Staff Only: item control page