Abstract

Although cooperatively breeding vertebrates occur disproportionately in unpredictable environments, the underlying mechanism shaping this biogeographic pattern remains unclear. Cooperative breeding may buffer against harsh conditions (hard life hypothesis), or additionally allow for sustained breeding under benign conditions (temporal variability hypothesis). To distinguish between the hard life and temporal variability hypotheses, we investigated whether the number of alloparents at a nest increased reproductive success or load-lightening in superb starlings (Lamprotornis superbus), and whether these two types of benefits varied in harsh and benign years. We found that mothers experienced both types of benefits consistent with the temporal variability hypothesis, as larger contingents of alloparents increased the number of young fledged while simultaneously allowing mothers to reduce their provisioning rates under both harsh and benign rainfall conditions. By contrast, fathers experienced load-lightening only under benign rainfall conditions, suggesting that cooperative breeding may serve to take advantage of unpredictable benign breeding seasons when they do occur. Cooperative breeding in unpredictable environments may thus promote flexibility in offspring care behaviour, which could mitigate variability in the cost of raising young. Our results highlight the importance of considering how offspring care decisions vary among breeding roles and across fluctuating environmental conditions.

Highlights

  • Despite decades of research on the ecological factors that shape animal sociality, the precise role that ecology plays in shaping the occurrence or evolution of cooperative breeding behaviour2018 The Authors

  • Broad-scale comparative analyses have demonstrated that cooperatively breeding 2 species of birds [2,3] and mammals [4] occur more frequently in unpredictable environments where annual rainfall is low and highly variable through time. This pattern has long been taken as evidence that unpredictable environments shape the evolution of cooperative breeding [2,3], though recent work suggests that cooperation may facilitate the colonization of variable and harsh environments [5]

  • Cooperative breeding may serve to buffer against these harsh conditions, allowing for successful reproduction when it would otherwise be impossible to raise young without the assistance of alloparents

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Summary

Introduction

Despite decades of research on the ecological factors that shape animal sociality, the precise role that ecology plays in shaping the occurrence or evolution of cooperative breeding behaviour2018 The Authors. Broad-scale comparative analyses have demonstrated that cooperatively breeding 2 species of birds [2,3] and mammals [4] occur more frequently in unpredictable environments where annual rainfall is low and highly variable through time. This pattern has long been taken as evidence that unpredictable environments shape the evolution of cooperative breeding [2,3], though recent work suggests that cooperation may facilitate the colonization of variable and harsh environments [5]. Having alloparents to help rear young in fluctuating environments may provide benefits exclusively under harsh conditions (hard life hypothesis), or under both harsh and benign conditions (temporal variability hypothesis). Understanding the benefits of cooperative breeding in unpredictable environments represents a critical area of research to explain the role of ecology in shaping the distribution of cooperatively breeding species globally [1]

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