Abstract

ABSTRACTDetailed studies of social behaviour and social organization are available at present for relatively few marsupial species, but a considerable body of information is to be found in the literature, and this review attempts to draw it together. The most important avenues of communication appear to be olfactory and auditory, with visual communication relatively unimportant in animals which are predominantly nocturnal. For each family, the different patterns of social organization which occur are discussed in terms of group size, composition and dispersion, mating system, pattern of parental care and nature of social interactions. This information forms the basis of a discussion of how environmental and other factors may have influenced the evolution of social organization. The majority of marsupial species are not group living. Nevertheless, in some species of the families Petauridae, Macropodidae and Phalangeridae, a variety of more or less stable small groups are found, including monogamous pairs and harem groups. Such groups usually have some part of their home range which is exclusive and includes some localized resource. Many of the larger kangaroos of the family Macropodidae are generally seen in groups which may be part of a changing nomadic population or sub‐units of a resident population which share a common home range. Minor differences in social organization between species appear to be due mainly to availability and dispersion of food resources. Overall, long‐term bonds between males and females are uncommon in marsupials, and the mating system is generally some form of promiscuity. It is argued that the marsupial mode of reproduction and parental care offers no advantage to male or female in long‐term bond formation. The female is able to rear young on her own and the male can increase his fitness more by encountering as many females as possible. Hence exclusive home ranges, whether defended or not, are uncommon.

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