Publication | Open Access
Sex differences in spatial ability: a test of the range size hypothesis in the order Carnivora
78
Citations
16
References
2011
Year
Breeding BehaviorAnimal BehaviourBehavioral SciencesDifferential Range SizeMammalogyEvolutionary BiologyAllometric StudySex DifferencesMovement EcologyInterspecific Behavioral InteractionSexual SelectionComparative PsychologySpatial CognitionRange Size HypothesisSex DifferenceMedicineAnimal BehaviorSpatial Ability
Sex differences in spatial cognition have been reported for many species ranging from voles to humans. The range size hypothesis predicts that sex differences in spatial ability will only occur in species in which the mating system selects for differential range size. Consistent with this prediction, we observed sex differences in spatial ability in giant pandas, a promiscuous species in which males inhabit larger ranges than females, but did not observe sex differences in Asian small-clawed otters, a related monogamous species in which males and females share home ranges. These results provide the first evidence of sex differences in spatial ability in the order Carnivora, and are consistent with the range size hypothesis.
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