Abstract

Communal nesting is generally assumed to be adaptive, meaning that it confers a fitness advantage on the individuals that share a nest site. This advantage may accrue directly to adults, or it may affect adult fitness through gains in offspring survival. In particular, survival of juveniles reared in communal groups may be greater because adults are present in the nest more often to provide care to young. To test the hypothesis that communal nesting is associated with increased adult presence in the nest, we used radiotelemetry to examine patterns of adult nest attendance as a function of group size for free-living colonial tuco-tucos ( Ctenomys sociabilis). Burrow systems of this social, subterranean rodent are inhabited by 1–6 adult females and, in some cases, a single adult male. Data obtained from residents of 26 burrow systems monitored during 1996–2000 indicated that the percentage of time that the nest was unattended (no adult present) did not vary predictably with date or time of day during the period between the birth and weaning of young. The percentage of time that the nest was unattended, however, decreased significantly as the number of adults per burrow system increased. This difference was most evident when the percentage of time that the nest was unattended was compared for lone females versus multi-adult groups. We suggest that increased nest attendance has important implications for the survival of juveniles reared in multi-adult burrow systems but that this effect may be confounded by the fitness consequences of other costs and benefits associated with communal nesting in this species.

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