Abstract

In many species, females have evolved behavioral strategies to reduce the risk of infanticide. For instance, polyandry can create paternity confusion that inhibits males from killing offspring they could have sired. Here, the authors propose that females could socially obtain the same benefits by nesting communally. Singly sired litters could be perceived as a large multiply sired litter once pooled together in a single nest. Long-term data from a wild house mouse population showed that monandrous litters (singly sired) were more common in communal than in solitary nests and 85% of them were raised with litters sired by different males hence becoming effectively polyandrous (multiply sired). These socially polyandrous litters had significantly higher offspring survival than genetically or socially monandrous litters and reached a similar survival to that of multiply sired litters raised in solitary or communal nests. Furthermore, the number of sires within nests significantly improved offspring survival whereas the number of mothers did not. These results suggest that the survival benefits associated with communal nesting are driven by polyandry and not communal defense. This socially mediated polyandry was as efficient as multiple paternity in preventing infanticide, and may also occur in other infanticidal and polytocous species where the caring parent exhibits social behavior.

Highlights

  • We showed that nests containing offspring sired by multiple males survived better than nests containing offspring sired by a single male, both in solitary and communal nests

  • Mating with multiple males allows polyandrous females to confuse the paternity of their litters preventing males from committing infanticide as they could kill their own offspring (Perrigo et al 1990; van Schaik et al 2000; Wolff and MacDonald 2004; Klemme and Ylönen 2010)

  • We suggest that paternity confusion is the mechanism responsible for the higher offspring survival associated with communal nesting

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Summary

Introduction

Infanticide, the act of killing parental care dependent conspecific non-offspring, is reported in a wide range of taxa, and is perpetrated by both males and females (Hausfater and Hrdy 1984; Hoogland 1985). Females can reduce infanticide by their mating behavior through polyandry, by mating with multiple partners during a single reproductive event (Hrdy 1979). Females might engage in a cooperative strategy and nest communally, allowing offspring defense duties to be shared and potentially reducing the time the young are left alone. An increased nest defense has been suggested to explain why communally nesting female house mice Mus musculus domesticus benefit from higher rates of offspring survival compared. We accounted for population density as a predictor of the intensity of the intrasexual reproductive competition, a factor that can favor infanticide (Ebensperger 1998; Mappes 2012)

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