达马拉兰鼹鼠不依靠帮手繁殖或生存。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2023-05-29 eCollection Date: 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1093/evlett/qrad023
Jack Thorley, Hanna M Bensch, Kyle Finn, Tim Clutton-Brock, Markus Zöttl
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在群居无脊椎动物和强制性合作繁殖者中,成功的繁殖依赖于非繁殖群体成员的协助。虽然裸鼹鼠(Heterocephalus glaber)和达马兰鼹鼠(Fukomys damarensis)经常被描述为usocial,而且它们的群体被认为比其他脊椎动物的群体更接近usocial昆虫的群体,但繁殖个体在多大程度上受益于非繁殖群体成员的帮助尚不清楚。在这里,我们发现,在野生达玛兰鼹鼠中,潜在的雌性繁殖者通常会独自分散并定居在新的洞穴系统中,它们在那里表现出很高的存活率,并保持良好的身体状况--通常会保持数年之久--然后才会有雄性繁殖者加入。与许多必须合作的脊椎动物不同的是,成对繁殖无需非繁殖帮手也能成功,而且实验中形成的成对繁殖的成功率与已建立的较大群体的繁殖成功率相似。虽然较大的繁殖群体比较小的群体招募的幼崽略多,但成体存活率与群体大小无关,群体大小对非繁殖者的生长也有不同的影响。我们的研究结果表明,达玛兰鼹鼠并不需要群体才能生存,该物种的合作繁殖并不是必须的,因为成对鼹鼠可以在没有帮手的情况下繁殖,而且经常这样做。我们的研究再次强调了生态限制对社会性鼹鼠散布的重要性,但群体大小的混合效应表明,在鼹鼠群居生活的进化过程中,通过合作行为获得的间接利益所起的作用可能没有以前认为的那么突出。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Damaraland mole-rats do not rely on helpers for reproduction or survival.

Damaraland mole-rats do not rely on helpers for reproduction or survival.

Damaraland mole-rats do not rely on helpers for reproduction or survival.

Damaraland mole-rats do not rely on helpers for reproduction or survival.

In eusocial invertebrates and obligate cooperative breeders, successful reproduction is dependent on assistance from non-breeding group members. Although naked (Heterocephalus glaber) and Damaraland mole-rats (Fukomys damarensis) are often described as eusocial and their groups are suggested to resemble those of eusocial insects more closely than groups of any other vertebrate, the extent to which breeding individuals benefit from the assistance of non-breeding group members is unclear. Here we show that, in wild Damaraland mole-rats, prospective female breeders usually disperse and settle alone in new burrow systems where they show high survival rates and remain in good body condition-often for several years-before being joined by males. In contrast to many obligate cooperative vertebrates, pairs reproduced successfully without non-breeding helpers, and the breeding success of experimentally formed pairs was similar to that of larger, established groups. Though larger breeding groups recruited slightly more pups than smaller groups, adult survival was independent of group size and group size had mixed effects on the growth of non-breeders. Our results suggest that Damaraland mole-rats do not need groups to survive and that cooperative breeding in the species is not obligate as pairs can-and frequently do-reproduce without the assistance of helpers. While re-emphasizing the importance of ecological constraints on dispersal in social mole-rats, the mixed effects of group size in our study suggest that indirect benefits accrued through cooperative behavior may have played a less prominent role in the evolution of mole-rat group-living than previously thought.

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CiteScore
7.20
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4.30%
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