Abstract

For avian group living to be evolutionary stable, multiple fitness benefits are expected. Yet, the difficulty of tracking fledglings, and thus estimating their survival rates, limits our knowledge on how such benefits may manifest postfledging. We radio‐tagged breeding females of the Afrotropical cooperatively breeding Placid greenbul (Phyllastrephus placidus) during nesting. Tracking these females after fledging permitted us to locate juvenile birds, their parents, and any helpers present and to build individual fledgling resighting datasets without incurring mortality costs or causing premature fledging due to handling or transmitter effects. A Bayesian framework was used to infer age‐specific mortality rates in relation to group size, fledging date, maternal condition, and nestling condition. Postfledging survival was positively related to group size, with fledglings raised in groups with four helpers showing nearly 30% higher survival until independence compared with pair‐only offspring, independent of fledging date, maternal condition or nestling condition. Our results demonstrate the importance of studying the early dependency period just after fledging when assessing presumed benefits of cooperative breeding. While studying small, mobile organisms after they leave the nest remains highly challenging, we argue that the telemetric approach proposed here may be a broadly applicable method to obtain unbiased estimates of postfledging survival.

Highlights

  • While it has generally been acknowledged that avian group living has to confer multiple benefits to be evolutionary stable (Dickinson & Hatchwell, 2004), the difficulty of following birds after fledging limits our knowledge on postfledging benefits

  • Postfledging survival was positively related to group size, with fledglings raised in groups with four helpers showing nearly 30% higher survival until independence compared with pair-­only offspring, independent of fledging date, maternal condition or nestling condition

  • Models were initially run with all four predictor variables included

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

While it has generally been acknowledged that avian group living has to confer multiple benefits to be evolutionary stable (Dickinson & Hatchwell, 2004), the difficulty of following birds after fledging (reviewed by Cox, Thompson, Cox, & Faaborg, 2014) limits our knowledge on postfledging benefits. Studies addressing possible effects of cooperative breeding on postfledging survival have yielded mixed results (see Appendix S1 and Table S1), possibly due to methodological and/or taxonomic heterogeneity. Few studies quantified survival during early dependency, when avian mortality rates are assumed to be highest. Most studies found that helpers appear to have a neutral effect on postfledging survival. The influence of helpers on postfledging juvenile survival may vary temporally. We use an innovative radio-­tracking approach to obtain postfledging survival estimates of an Afrotropical cooperatively breeding bird and relate these to group size. Age-­ specific postfledging mortality rates were obtained by fitting parametric survival functions to resighting data using a Bayesian framework (Colchero, Jones, & Rebke, 2012)

| MATERIAL AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.