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No evidence for larger brains in cooperatively...
Journal article

No evidence for larger brains in cooperatively breeding cichlid fishes

Abstract

The social brain hypothesis posits that frequent social interactions, characteristic of group living species, select for greater socio-cognitive abilities and the requisite neural machinery. An extension of the social brains hypothesis, known as the cooperative breeding brain hypothesis, postulates that cooperatively breeding species, which live in stable social groups and provide allocare, face particularly pronounced cognitive demands because …

Authors

Reddon AR; O’Connor CM; Ligocki IY; Hellmann JK; Marsh-Rollo SE; Hamilton IM; Balshine S

Journal

Canadian Journal of Zoology, Vol. 94, No. 5, pp. 373–378

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Publication Date

May 2016

DOI

10.1139/cjz-2015-0118

ISSN

0008-4301