Schradin Carsten, Pillay Neville
Ecophysiological Studies Research Group, School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
J Comp Psychol. 2004 Mar;118(1):37-47. doi: 10.1037/0735-7036.118.1.37.
The authors studied the striped mouse (Rhabdomys pumilio) in the semiarid succulent karoo of South Africa. Mice forage alone, but they live in groups that share a common nest. Groups consist of 1 to 4 breeding females, 1 to 2 breeding males, and their offspring of both sexes, which remain in their natal group even after reaching adulthood, participating in territorial defense and nest building without showing signs of reproductive activity. Interactions are typically amicable and take place inside or in front of the nest. In contrast, encounters with mice from other groups are aggressive. Group living in the succulent karoo is possibly due to ecological constraints imposed by habitat saturation because of a year-round stable food supply as well as associated benefits of philopatry.
作者们对南非半干旱多汁卡鲁地区的条纹小鼠(Rhabdomys pumilio)进行了研究。小鼠独自觅食,但它们群居并共用一个巢穴。群体由1至4只繁殖雌性、1至2只繁殖雄性以及它们的雌雄后代组成,这些后代即使成年后仍留在出生群体中,参与领地防御和巢穴建造,且未表现出繁殖活动的迹象。互动通常是友好的,发生在巢穴内部或巢穴前。相比之下,与其他群体的小鼠相遇则具有攻击性。生活在多汁卡鲁地区的群居现象可能是由于栖息地饱和带来的生态限制,这是因为全年有稳定的食物供应以及留居本地的相关益处。