Pair-Living Emerged Early in Placental Mammals
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It is widely assumed that the first placental mammals were solitary. This assumption has been used as the default in previous comparative studies, but has never been tested independently. Here, we compiled a comprehensive database by reviewing over 14,000 primary peer-reviewed publications on the social organization of the 5,386 extant placental mammal species. We found empirical data for 738 species across 1,478 populations: 354 populations were primarily solitary, 241 populations pair-living and 878 populations group-living. Notably, 383 species (52%) and 580 populations (39%) exhibited intra-specific variation in social organization. Using a Bayesian phylogenetic framework that incorporates intra-specific variation, we show that the ancestral placental mammal - living approximately 160 to 100 million years ago - was not exclusively solitary, but likely displayed intraspecific variation. Pair-living was predicted to account for approximately 26% of ancestral social organisation. Our analysis found that ecology and life history of extant solitary and pair-living mammals was very similar and different from those of group-living mammals. Our results revise prevailing theories of mammalian social evolution, revealing that pair-living emerged early, shifting the focus of mammalian social evolution from the origins of pair-living to the origins of group-living.