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Abstract
In cooperatively breeding species, care provided by helpers may affect the dominant breeders' investment trade-offs between current and future reproduction. By negatively compensating for such additional care, breeders can reduce costs of reproduction and improve their own chances of survival. Alternatively, helper care can be additive to that of dominants, increasing the fledging fitness of the current brood. However, the influence helpers have on brood care may be affected by group size and territory quality. Therefore, the impact of helping needs to be disentangled from other factors determining offspring investment before conclusive inferences about the effect of help on additive and compensatory care can be made. We used 20 years of provisioning data to investigate the effect of helping on provisioning rates in the facultative cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler Acrocephalus sechellensis. Our extensive dataset allowed us to statistically disentangle the effects of helper presence, living in larger groups and different food availability. We show compensatory and additive care (i.e., partial compensation) in response to helper provisioning. Helpers lightened the provisioning load of the dominant male and female and increased total provisioning to nestlings. This was irrespective of group size or territory quality (food availability). Moreover, our results illustrate sex-specific variation in parental care over the course of the breeding event. We discriminate between temporal variation, group size, and territory quality processes affecting cooperative care and as such, gain further insight into the importance of these factors to the evolutionary maintenance of helping behavior.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2986-2995 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Ecology and Evolution |
Volume | 9 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Mar-2019 |
Keywords
- additive care
- compensatory care
- cooperative breeding
- investment strategies
- load-lightening
- parental care
- Seychelles warbler
- REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS
- INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
- PARENTAGE ASSIGNMENT
- AEGITHALOS-CAUDATUS
- MATERNAL INVESTMENT
- FEMALE BREEDERS
- FAIRY-WRENS
- LONG-TERM
- CARE
- BENEFITS
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Dive into the research topics of 'Compensatory and additive helper effects in the cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis)'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Datasets
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Dataset from: Compensatory and additive helper effects in the cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis)
van Boheemen, L. (Creator), Hammers, M. (Creator), Kingma, S. A. (Creator), Richardson, D. S. (Creator), Burke, T. (Creator), Komdeur, J. (Creator) & Dugdale, H. (Creator), University of Groningen, 16-Aug-2018
DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.6977564.v1, https://github.com/Seychelle-Warbler-Project/vanBoheemen_Lotte/
Dataset
Projects
- 1 Finished
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Why do social species live longer? - Investigating interactions between helping and senescence in cooperatively breeding animals
Hammers, M. (Postdoc), Weissing, F. (Advisor) & Komdeur, J. (Advisor)
16/11/2015 → 16/11/2019
Project: Research