Abstract

Indirect fitness benefits gained through kin-selected helping are widely invoked to explain the evolution of cooperative breeding behavior in birds. However, the impact of helpers on productivity of helped broods can be difficult to determine if the effects are confounded by territory quality or if the benefit of helpers is apparent only in the long term. In riflemen Acanthisitta chloris, helping and group membership are effectively decoupled as adult helpers are individuals that have dispersed from their natal territory and live independently from breeders in "kin neighborhoods." Nevertheless, helpers direct their care toward close relatives, suggesting that helping provides indirect fitness benefits. The aim of this study was to examine the benefits of helpers to recipient offspring in the rifleman, investigating both short- and long-term effects. The total amount of food delivered to nestlings in helped broods was greater than that received by broods without helpers. This did not result in any short-term increase in nestling mass or nestling body condition nor was there any reduction in length of the nestling period at helped nests. However, helpers were associated with a significant increase in juvenile recruitment, with twice the proportion of fledglings surviving to the next breeding season from helped broods relative to unhelped broods. Thus, helpers gain indirect fitness by improving the survival of kin, and in contrast to a previous study of riflemen, we conclude that kin selection has played a key role in the evolution of cooperative breeding in this species.

Highlights

  • In many cooperatively breeding species, helpers gain indirect fitness benefits by increasing the productivity of kin (Hamilton 1964)

  • We examine whether adult helpers in the cooperatively breeding rifleman Acanthisitta chloris gain indirect fitness benefits from assisting kin

  • To determine whether helpers gain indirect fitness benefits in cooperatively breeding species, it must be shown that helping is directed toward relatives and that helpers have a positive effect on the productivity of these kin

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Summary

Introduction

In many cooperatively breeding species, helpers gain indirect fitness benefits by increasing the productivity of kin (Hamilton 1964). This can be achieved by enhancing the number or survival of offspring (Cockburn 1998), by improving the survival and the future reproduction of breeders (Crick 1992), or by enabling breeders to increase their number of reproductive attempts within a season (Russell and Rowley 1988). Disentangling the effects of help from the confounding effects of individual and territory quality can be difficult, in those species where mature offspring typically remain on their natal territory to help. In such cases, the productivity of a breeding group

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