Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Jun 28;108 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):10816-22. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1100303108. Epub 2011 Jun 20.
In cooperatively breeding systems in which some individuals delay reproduction to help raise others' offspring, environmental variation in space and time influences individual reproductive strategies as well as interspecific patterns of sociality. Although most environmental explanations for cooperative breeding emphasize the mean fitness gains of living socially, the fittest individuals are not always those that produce on average the highest number of offspring. At times, variance in fecundity can influence fitness as much as mean fecundity, particularly in small populations like those of cooperative breeders. Cooperative breeding behavior could therefore be a risk-averse strategy to maximize fitness by reducing environmentally induced fecundity variance. Such a within-generation bet-hedging hypothesis for social evolution predicts that (i) variance in reproductive success should be related to environmental variation, (ii) variance in reproductive success should be related to the potential for cooperation in a group, and (iii) the potential for cooperation should be related to environmental variation. Using data from a 10-y study of cooperatively breeding superb starlings (Lamprotornis superbus) living in a temporally and spatially variable savanna ecosystem, I found that variance in reproductive success declined with increasing environmental quality (temporal variation), increasing territory quality (spatial variation), and increasing group size (potential for cooperation), which is itself related to environmental variation. To understand the adaptive value of cooperative breeding behavior in variable environments, researchers must consider both mean and environmentally induced variance in fecundity. Determining how spatiotemporal environmental variation drives risk-averse strategies may provide insights into the evolution of complex social behavior.
在合作繁殖系统中,一些个体延迟繁殖以帮助抚养其他个体的后代,空间和时间上的环境变化会影响个体的繁殖策略以及种间社会性模式。尽管大多数合作繁殖的环境解释强调了群居生活的平均适合度收益,但最适应的个体并不总是平均产生最多后代的个体。有时,繁殖力的方差与平均繁殖力一样能影响适合度,特别是在像合作繁殖者那样的小种群中。因此,合作繁殖行为可能是一种规避风险的策略,可以通过减少环境引起的繁殖力方差来最大化适合度。这种针对社会进化的代内套期保值假说预测:(i)繁殖成功率的方差应与环境变化有关;(ii)繁殖成功率的方差应与群体中合作的潜力有关;(iii)合作的潜力应与环境变化有关。利用在一个时间和空间上变化的热带稀树草原生态系统中共同繁殖的超级星椋鸟(Lamprotornis superbus)进行的 10 年研究数据,我发现繁殖成功率的方差随着环境质量(时间变化)、领地质量(空间变化)和群体大小(合作潜力)的增加而降低,而这本身就与环境变化有关。为了理解可变环境中合作繁殖行为的适应性价值,研究人员必须同时考虑繁殖力的平均值和环境诱导的方差。确定时空环境变化如何驱动避险策略,可能为复杂社会行为的进化提供新的见解。