Dispersal of sibling coalitions promotes helping among immigrants in a cooperatively breeding bird.

Stuart P Sharp, Michelle Simeoni, Ben J Hatchwell
Author Information
  1. Stuart P Sharp: Evolution and Behaviour Group, Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK. sps44@cam.ac.uk

Abstract

Kin selection is a major force in social evolution, but dispersal is often assumed to reduce its impact by diluting kinship. In most cooperatively breeding vertebrates, in which more than two individuals care for young, juveniles delay dispersal and become helpers in family groups. In long-tailed tits (Aegithalos caudatus), however, offspring disperse to breed and helpers are failed breeders that preferentially aid kin. Helping also occurs among immigrants, but their origins are unknown and cooperation in these cases is poorly understood. Here, we combine long-term demographic and genetic data from our study population to investigate immigration and helping in this species. We first used a novel application of parentage analysis to discriminate between immigrants and unknown philopatric recruits. We then cross-checked sibship reconstruction with pairwise relatedness estimates to show that immigrants disperse in sibling coalitions and helping among them is kin biased. These results indicate that dispersal need not preclude sociality, and dispersal of kin coalitions may help maintain kin-selected cooperation in the absence of delayed dispersal.

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MeSH Term

Animal Communication
Animal Migration
Animals
Breeding
Cooperative Behavior
Female
Male
Nesting Behavior
Passeriformes
Population Dynamics
Sexual Behavior, Animal

Word Cloud

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