Elbroch, Levy, Lubell, Quigley, and Caragiulo (2017, Science Advances, 3, e170218) used GPS and motion-activated camera technology to track and rate the interactions between solitary wild pumas. They found that tolerance at feeding sites was not predicted by kinship but, rather, indicated the ability to engage in direct reciprocity, challenging previous assumptions about social cognition in solitary species.
CITATION STYLE
Vonk, J. (2018). Social tolerance in not-so-social pumas. Learning and Behavior, 46(2), 105–106. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-017-0312-z
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