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- Territoriality occurs widely throughout the animal kingdom, observed in taxa as diverse as mammals, birds, insects and fishes. Territories are spatial regions, defended against conspecifics, for the purpose of using resources and providing mating opportunities.
royalsocietypublishing.org › doi › 10How do animal territories form and change? Lessons from 20 ...
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Feb 25, 2019 · February 25, 2019. Many animals are territorial as adults. This strategy often makes evolutionary sense since animals can defend clumped resources more efficiently if they stake out a space of their own. Territorial species’ social systems have adapted around this concept, which shapes some of what the animals learn and how they communicate.
Jun 7, 2014 · Territoriality occurs widely throughout the animal kingdom, observed in taxa as diverse as mammals, birds, insects and fishes. Territories are spatial regions, defended against conspecifics, for the purpose of using resources and providing mating opportunities.
- Jonathan R. Potts, Mark A. Lewis
- 2014
Citation: Briffa, M. (2010) Territoriality and Aggression. Nature Education Knowledge 3 (10) :81. Conflict is ubiquitous in the animal kingdom. In some cases it results in direct violence,...
A territory is a part of the home range defended against other members of the same species. As a generalization it may be said that territoriality is more important in the behaviour of birds than of mammals, but data for the latter are available primarily for diurnal species.
Jun 1, 2020 · Territoriality is a powerful framework in animal behaviour, motivating and lending context to research on myriad aspects of animals’ biology, including resource acquisition, space use behaviour, communication and mating systems ( Noble, 1939, Carpenter, 1958, Orians, 1969, Emlen and Oring, 1977, Maher and Lott, 1995, Maher and Lott, 2000 ).
- Ambika Kamath, Ashton B. Wesner
- 2020
territory, in ecology, any area defended by an organism or a group of similar organisms for such purposes as mating, nesting, roosting, or feeding. Most vertebrates and some invertebrates, such as arthropods, including insects, exhibit territorial behaviour.
Apr 16, 2014 · Territory formation is ubiquitous throughout the animal kingdom. At the individual level, various behaviours attempt to exclude conspecifics from regions of space. At the population level, animals often segregate into distinct territorial areas. Consequently, it should be possible to derive territor …