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Meerkats use two different types of vocal interactions to stay in touch with their group mates. Sometimes the call simply broadcasts information, whereas other times meerkats engage in a call exchange with their neighbors, as researchers from the Center for the Advanced Study of Collective Behavior at the University of Konstanz and the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior present in a new publication published on 20 May in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

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Zurich ,Züsz ,Switzerland ,South Africa ,Ariana Strandburg Peshkin ,Max Planck Institute Of Animal Behavior ,Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society ,University Of Konstanz ,Kalahari Research Center ,University Of Zurich ,Vlad Demartsev ,Advanced Study ,Collective Behavior ,Max Planck Institute ,Animal Behavior ,Philosophical Transactions ,Royal Society ,Excellence Collective Behavior ,Royal Societyb Biological Sciences ,

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