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Loftus J Carter
Harel Roi
Ashbury Alison M
Núñez Chase L
Omondi George P
Muttinda Mathew
Matsumoto-Oda Akiko
Isbell Lynne A
Crofoot Margaret C
Sharing sleeping sites disrupts sleep but catalyses social tolerance and coordination between groups.
Abstract
Sleeping refuges-like other important, scarce and shareable resources-can serve as hotspots for animal interaction, shaping patterns of attraction and avoidance. Where sleeping sites are shared, individuals balance the opportunity for interaction with new social partners against their need for sleep. By expanding the network of connections within animal populations, such night-time social interactions may have important, yet largely unexplored, impacts on critical behavioural and ecological processes. Here, using GPS and tri-axial accelerometry to track the movements and sleeping patterns of wild olive baboon groups (