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Abstract
In many cooperatively breeding animals, a combination of ecological constraints and benefits of philopatry favours offspring taking a subordinate position on the natal territory instead of dispersing to breed independently. However, in many species individuals disperse to a subordinate position in a non-natal group (subordinate between-group dispersal), despite losing the kin-selected and nepotistic benefits of remaining in the natal group. It is unclear which social, genetic and ecological factors drive between-group dispersal. We aim to elucidate the adaptive significance of subordinate between-group dispersal by examining which factors promote such dispersal, whether subordinates gain improved ecological and social conditions by joining a non-natal group, and whether between-group dispersal results in increased lifetime reproductive success and survival. Using a long-term dataset on the cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis), we investigated how a suite of proximate factors (food availability, group composition, age and sex of focal individuals, population density) promote subordinate between-group dispersal by comparing such dispersers with subordinates that dispersed to a dominant position or became floaters. We then analysed whether subordinates that moved to a dominant or non-natal subordinate position, or became floaters, gained improved conditions relative to the natal territory and compared fitness components between the three dispersal strategies. We show that individuals that joined another group as non-natal subordinates were mainly female and that, similar to floating, between-group dispersal was associated with social and demographic factors that constrained dispersal to an independent breeding position. Between-group dispersal was not driven by improved ecological or social conditions in the new territory and did not result in higher survival. Instead, between-group dispersing females often became cobreeders, obtaining maternity in the new territory, and were likely to inherit the territory in the future, leading to higher lifetime reproductive success compared to females that floated. Males never reproduced as subordinates, which may be one explanation why subordinate between-group dispersal by males is rare. Our results suggest that subordinate between-group dispersal is used by females to obtain reproductive benefits when options to disperse to an independent breeding position are limited. This provides important insight into the additional strategies that individuals can use to obtain reproductive benefits.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1251-1263 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Journal of Animal Ecology |
Volume | 87 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Sept-2018 |
Keywords
- benefits of philopatry
- communal breeding
- cooperative breeding
- joint nesting
- natal dispersal
- subordinate between-group dispersal
- DELAYED DISPERSAL
- ACROCEPHALUS-SECHELLENSIS
- ECOLOGICAL CONSTRAINTS
- LIFE-HISTORY
- TERRITORY ACQUISITION
- PARENTAGE ASSIGNMENT
- PREDATION RISK
- GROUP-SIZE
- R PACKAGE
- EVOLUTION
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Dive into the research topics of 'Subordinate females in the cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler obtain direct benefits by joining unrelated groups'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Datasets
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Data from: Subordinate females in the cooperatively breeding Seychelles warbler obtain direct benefits by joining unrelated groups
Groenewoud, F. (Creator), Kingma, S. A. (Creator), Hammers, M. (Creator), Dugdale, H. (Creator), Burke, T. (Creator), Richardson, D. S. (Creator) & Komdeur, J. (Creator), University of Groningen, 15-May-2018
Dataset
Projects
- 2 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
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The uphill struggle to understand social behaviour: The importance of genes, ecology and evolution
Komdeur, J. (PI), Weissing, F. (PI), Utz, M. (Postdoc), Busana, M. (PhD student) & Groenewoud, F. (PhD student)
01/01/2012 → 01/01/2017
Project: Research