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Kin Discrimination in a Macropod Marsupial
Authors:Daniel T. Blumstein,&dagger  ,Jodie G. Ardron&dagger  ,&Dagger  ,&   Christopher S. Evans&Dagger  
Affiliation:Department of Organismic Biology, Ecology, and Evolution, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA;;The Cooperative Research Centre for Conservation and Management of Marsupials, Macquarie University, Sydney;;Animal Behaviour Laboratory, Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Abstract:Differential treatment of kin is ubiquitous in social animals. Parents often behave preferentially towards their dependent offspring. Species in several taxa also bias behaviour towards non-descendent kin. This latter phenomenon has not been demonstrated in marsupials, which are reportedly less social than eutherian mammals. We report the first evidence of non-parental kin-biased behaviour in a macropodid marsupial. Experimental pairing of individuals based on kinship reliably altered the rate of aggression between individuals in pairs of female tammar wallabies ( Macropus eugenii ). This effect is probably attributable to relatedness rather than to familiarity. Marsupial sociality may be substantially more complex than is currently recognized.
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