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The use of referential gestures in ravens (Corvus corax) in the wild
Human children use referential gestures such as showing, offering and pointing, which are thought to form the foundation of language skills. Here, evidence is provided of ravens (Corvus corax) using showing and offering to direct other's attention, as an example of referential gesturing in a non-primate lineage.
- Simone Pika
- & Thomas Bugnyar
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| Open AccessInnate recognition of water bodies in echolocating bats
Little is known about the way bats recognize large objects, such as trees, buildings or a lake. Greif and Siemers show that bodies of water are recognized solely by echolocation, and that this ability is innate, thus smooth surfaces are recognized as water by naive juvenile bats.
- Stefan Greif
- & Björn M. Siemers
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Automated home-cage behavioural phenotyping of mice
Studying the behaviour of captive mice requires considerable time and effort. Here, video-based software is designed and implemented to automatically quantitate mouse behaviour; the system performs well in comparison with manual human observations.
- Hueihan Jhuang
- , Estibaliz Garrote
- & Thomas Serre
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| Open AccessThe fitness of dispersing spotted hyaena sons is influenced by maternal social status
Spotted hyaenas live in clans with a hierarchy of females with different social ranks. In this paper, the sons of high-ranking female hyaenas are shown to have greater fitness than sons born of mothers of medium and low rank. This study highlights the importance of maternal effects in evolution.
- Oliver P. Höner
- , Bettina Wachter
- & Marion L. East
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| Open AccessMale water striders attract predators to intimidate females into copulation
Female water striders have evolved a strategy to control the frequency of copulation. In this article, male water striders are shown to attract predators during copulation to coerce the female into yielding more quickly. These findings demonstrate how adaptive behaviour may be influenced by predation.
- Chang S. Han
- & Piotr G. Jablonski
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A new Argentinean nesting site showing neosauropod dinosaur reproduction in a Cretaceous hydrothermal environment
Dinosaur nesting sites have been found in many different places, but the factors that influenced the choice of location are unclear. Here, a sauropod nesting site is described in a geothermal setting in the Sanagasta Valley, suggesting that the dinosaurs used the warm environment to favour the incubation process.
- Gerald Grellet-Tinner
- & Lucas E. Fiorelli
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Adopting kin enhances inclusive fitness in asocial red squirrels
Adoption is an altruistic behaviour that incurs parental costs. Gorrellet al. examined more than 2,000 squirrel litters and showed that red squirrels adopt only their kin, resulting in an increase in their inclusive fitness. These data provide support for Hamilton's rule of altruism.
- Jamieson C. Gorrell
- , Andrew G. McAdam
- & Stan Boutin
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Deep-sea hydrothermal vent animals seek cool fluids in a highly variable thermal environment
Many animals adapt their behaviour according to their surroundings. Here, Bateset al.show that animals living in deep-sea hydrothermal vents choose habitats within their thermal limits.
- Amanda E Bates
- , Raymond W Lee
- & Miles D Lamare
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| Open AccessThe evolutionary origins of ritualized acoustic signals in caterpillars
Many animals communicate through gestures, some caterpillars use scraping and drumming signals to ward off unwanted neighbours. Here, Scottet al. demonstrate that "leg-like" structures used by some caterpillar species to communicate evolved from legs that their ancestors used to walk.
- Jaclyn L. Scott
- , Akito Y. Kawahara
- & Jayne E. Yack