Suh Young Ha, Bowman Reed, Fitzpatrick John W
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2022 May;91(5):970-982. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13669. Epub 2022 Feb 28.
Why unrelated members form groups in animal societies remains a pertinent topic in evolutionary biology because benefits for group members often are not obvious. We studied subordinates that disperse to join unrelated social groups in the Florida scrub-jay Aphelocoma coerulescens, a cooperative breeding species mainly composed of kin-based groups. We evaluated potential adaptive benefits of dispersing to become an unrelated helper (staging) versus remaining home and dispersing only to pair and breed (direct dispersal) to understand why non-kin-based groups form. Using 35 years of demographic data, we quantified life-history aspects of staging individuals and tested associations between social and ecological factors on the natal and staging territories. We compared fitness outcomes between dispersal strategies by analysing survival, breeding recruitment and direct reproductive output. We tested for sexual asymmetry potentially driven by differences in territory acquisition patterns and female-biased dispersal for this species. Of birds that reached 1 year, 28% staged at a non-natal territory before breeding or disappearing. Staging dispersers departed at younger ages and moved greater distances than direct dispersers. When looking at proximate factors on the natal territory associated with staging, males left groups with many same-sex helpers, while females often left when their father disappeared. For both sexes, staging individuals more likely came from high-quality territories and joined groups with fewer same-sex helpers than in their natal group. While staging and direct dispersers did not differ in survival or likelihood of becoming a breeder, staging males became breeders later and had lower lifetime reproductive success than direct dispersers. In Florida scrub-jays, staging appears to be an alternative strategy for female helpers, but a best-of-a-bad-situation for males. This sexual asymmetry is consistent with males having more options than females to achieve higher reproductive success by breeding near home. Trade-offs in cost-benefits of departing the natal territory and joining unrelated groups as a helper seem to best explain alternative dispersal patterns, with optimal social queues primarily driving the benefits. This research highlights plasticity in dispersal behaviour in response to social and environmental conditions and offers a new perspective in our understanding of non-kin-based social groups.
在动物社会中,无亲缘关系的个体为何会形成群体,这在进化生物学中仍是一个相关话题,因为群体成员所获得的益处往往并不明显。我们研究了佛罗里达灌丛鸦(Aphelocoma coerulescens)中分散出去加入无亲缘关系社会群体的从属个体,这是一种主要由基于亲缘关系的群体构成的合作繁殖物种。我们评估了分散出去成为无亲缘关系的帮手(暂居)与留在出生地、仅在配对和繁殖时才分散(直接分散)这两种情况的潜在适应性益处,以理解为何会形成非亲缘关系的群体。利用35年的人口统计学数据,我们量化了暂居个体的生活史方面,并测试了出生地产区和暂居产区的社会与生态因素之间的关联。我们通过分析存活率、繁殖招募和直接繁殖产出,比较了不同分散策略的适合度结果。我们测试了可能由领地获取模式差异和该物种雌性偏向性分散所导致的性别不对称。在活到1岁的鸟类中,28%在繁殖或消失前在非出生地产区暂居。暂居分散者比直接分散者离开时年龄更小,移动距离更远。在研究与暂居相关的出生地产区的近因时,雄性会离开有许多同性帮手的群体,而雌性通常在父亲消失时离开。对于两性而言,暂居个体更有可能来自高质量产区,并且加入的群体中同性帮手比其出生群体中的更少。虽然暂居者和直接分散者在存活率或成为繁殖者的可能性上没有差异,但暂居的雄性成为繁殖者的时间更晚,且终生繁殖成功率低于直接分散者。在佛罗里达灌丛鸦中,暂居似乎是雌性帮手的一种替代策略,但对雄性来说是在糟糕情况下的最佳选择。这种性别不对称与雄性比雌性有更多选择通过在出生地附近繁殖来实现更高繁殖成功率是一致的。离开出生地产区并作为帮手加入无亲缘关系群体的成本效益权衡似乎最能解释不同的分散模式,其中最优的社会队列主要驱动着益处。这项研究突出了分散行为对社会和环境条件的可塑性反应,并为我们理解非亲缘关系的社会群体提供了一个新视角。