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Bats, bees, lobsters, and gorillas practice social distancing too

Humans are not the only animals that social distance. Animals do it too, but there’s a cost.

Bats, bees, lobsters, and gorillas practice social distancing too

[Image: Clker-Free-Vector-Images/Pixabay]

BY Arianne Cohen1 minute read

Humans are not the only animals that social distance.

In recent years, animals including bats, bees, and tortoises have suffered epidemics that have gutted their populations. Generally, these emerging infectious diseases appear in species that are already facing stress and possible decline. (Sound familiar?) But an array of social distancing behaviors helps buffer the damage.

A trio of researchers from Hamilton College, Virginia Tech, and the University of Pittsburgh reviewed studies of social animals including lobsters, bats, bees, humans, Tasmanian devils, frogs, birds, and wolves to see how they adjust their social habits when facing new infectious diseases.

They found lots of social distancing at play in response to specific emerging infectious diseases, though the mechanisms vary widely. For example, they found evidence that:

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  • Healthy lobsters avoid sick lobsters
  • Infected bats curb their own socialization
  • Ill bees fail to return to their hives altogether, thereby protecting the group
  • Female gorillas will join a new social group in response to infectious skin lesions on troop mates
  • Mandrill monkeys stop grooming ill peers
  • Ants shift to more modular social structures to limit spread

These animalia varieties of social distancing can be exceedingly costly: For example, solitary gorillas are less likely to contract Ebola, but are more vulnerable to predators, and also enact higher levels of infanticide. (Single parents currently weathering the pandemic will find this detail unsurprising.) Less aggressive Tasmanian devils do not contract transmissible cancers but are also less likely to mate. They found that many species do not social distance when facing less virulent infections, such as humans with the common cold, and wolves with mange—who, even with mange, are still more likely to survive in a pack.

Thus the researchers conclude that for most animals, significant social distancing is “unsustainable” over the long term. Humans, however, they point out, are a highly social species with the unique opportunity of virtual communication, which may help maintain ongoing social relationships over the long haul.

In short: We’re far from alone in this pandemic thing.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Arianne Cohen is a journalist who has appeared frequently in Fast Company, Bloomberg Businessweek, The Guardian, The New York Times, and Vogue. More


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