Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2012 Sep 22;279(1743):3861-9. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2012.1080. Epub 2012 Jul 11.
Kin selection theory has been the central model for understanding the evolution of cooperative breeding, where non-breeders help bear the cost of rearing young. Recently, the dominance of this idea has been questioned; particularly in obligate cooperative breeders where breeding without help is uncommon and seldom successful. In such systems, the direct benefits gained through augmenting current group size have been hypothesized to provide a tractable alternative (or addition) to kin selection. However, clear empirical tests of the opposing predictions are lacking. Here, we provide convincing evidence to suggest that kin selection and not group augmentation accounts for decisions of whether, where and how often to help in an obligate cooperative breeder, the chestnut-crowned babbler (Pomatostomus ruficeps). We found no evidence that group members base helping decisions on the size of breeding units available in their social group, despite both correlational and experimental data showing substantial variation in the degree to which helpers affect productivity in units of different size. By contrast, 98 per cent of group members with kin present helped, 100 per cent directed their care towards the most related brood in the social group, and those rearing half/full-sibs helped approximately three times harder than those rearing less/non-related broods. We conclude that kin selection plays a central role in the maintenance of cooperative breeding in this species, despite the apparent importance of living in large groups.
亲缘选择理论一直是理解合作繁殖进化的核心模型,在合作繁殖中,非繁殖者帮助承担抚养幼崽的成本。最近,这种观点的主导地位受到了质疑;特别是在强制性合作繁殖者中,没有帮助繁殖并不常见,也很少成功。在这种系统中,通过增加当前群体规模获得的直接利益被假设为提供了一种可行的替代(或补充)亲缘选择。然而,缺乏对相反预测的明确经验测试。在这里,我们提供了令人信服的证据,表明亲缘选择而非群体扩大解释了在强制性合作繁殖者栗冠鹦鹉(Pomatostomus ruficeps)中是否、何地以及何时帮助的决定。我们没有发现群体成员根据其社交群体中可用繁殖单位的大小来做出帮助决策的证据,尽管相关数据和实验数据都表明,在帮助者对不同大小的单位生产力的影响程度上存在很大差异。相比之下,有亲缘关系的 98%的群体成员会提供帮助,100%的成员会将他们的关怀指向社交群体中最相关的巢,而那些抚养半同胞/全同胞的成员的帮助力度大约是抚养非相关或较少相关巢的成员的三倍。我们的结论是,尽管生活在大群体中似乎很重要,但亲缘选择在维持这种物种的合作繁殖中起着核心作用。