Department for the Ecology of Animal Societies

 

original
original
original
original
original
original
original
original
original
original

 

For many animals, ecological and evolutionary success depends not only on the characteristics or decisions of lone individuals, but also on what happens when groups of individuals come together and interact. These group-level behaviors and traits are important because they can transform the social landscape, giving rise to novel selective pressures that drive the evolution of social complexity. Our research seeks to answer the fundamental question: How do animal societies emerge and function?

We embrace an explicitly collaborative approach to scientific exploration. Our multi-disciplinary team works together to develop new ways of measuring, analyzing and interpreting the behavior of socially complex animal species in ecologically and evolutionarily relevant field settings. Within- and between-species comparison is critical to understanding the causes and consequences of social variation and so we aim to build a common framework for monitoring and analyzing the interactions—from dyad to group to population—that comprise the ‘sociome.’

Decision Making in Social Groups

Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r391SypQsQE

Latest news

capuchin monkey in a stream bed with a baby howler on its back

How cameras on a remote island in Panama captured the origin and spread of a bizarre “fad” more

Very different mammals follow the same rules of behavior

Research hints at an underlying architecture that orders the movements of animals more

Zwei Bonobos, die Händchen halten

Study on wild bonobos reveals that females team up to maintain power in their societies more

blackbuck visualised by yellow bounding boxes

With “Bucktales” three postdocs hope to power a wave of collaboration on AI tools for drone-based study of wild animals more

Protecting the world’s bonobo stronghold

A twenty-year study in Congo’s largest protected park confirms that rangers are effective in preserving the endangered species more

Show more
Go to Editor View