The distribution of reproductive success within societies is a key determinant of the outcomes of social evolution. Attempts to explain social diversity, therefore, require that we quantify reproductive skews and identify the mechanisms that generate them. Here, we address this priority using life history and genotypic data from >600 individuals in 40 wild groups of the cooperatively breeding white-browed sparrow weaver, Plocepasser mahali .W e show that groups comprise up to six males and seven females, but within-group reproduction is completely monopolised by a single dominant male and female, while extra-group males sire 12-18 % of offspring. Strong within- group kin structure could frequently explain these monopo- lies, as subordinates had typically delayed dispersal from their natal groups and so frequently (1) lacked within- group outbreeding partners, and/or (2) stood to gain little from contesting dominant reproduction, being almost as related to the dominant's young as they would have been to their own. Kin structure alone cannot account entirely for these monopolies, however, as they remained complete fol- lowing the immigration of unrelated males and females. That subordinate females remain reproductively quiescent despite also showing comparable body condition to dominants, overlapping them substantially in age, and showing no evidence of elevated stress hormone levels raises the possi- bility that they exercise reproductive restraint due instead to a threat of action by dominants and/or deficits in offspring fitness that might arise if subordinates bred. Our findings highlight the complexity of the mechanisms that generate reproductive disparities in animal societies and the challenge of identifying them when skews are complete.
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