Harrison Nicola, Lindholm Anna K, Dobay Akos, Halloran Olivia, Manser Andri, König Barbara
1Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057 Zurich, Switzerland.
2Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Front Zool. 2018 Feb 20;15:4. doi: 10.1186/s12983-018-0251-3. eCollection 2018.
Communal nursing in house mice is an example of cooperation where females pool litters in the same nest and indiscriminately nurse own and other offspring despite potential exploitation. The direct fitness benefits associated with communal nursing shown in laboratory studies suggest it to be a selected component of female house mice reproductive behaviour. However, past studies on communal nursing in free-living populations have debated whether it is a consequence of sharing the same nest or an active choice. Here using data from a long-term study of free-living, wild house mice we investigated individual nursing decisions and determined what factors influenced a female's decision to nurse communally.
Females chose to nurse solitarily more often than expected by chance, but the likelihood of nursing solitarily decreased when females had more partners available. While finding no influence of pairwise relatedness on partner choice, we observed that females shared their social environment with genetically similar individuals, suggesting a female's home area consisted of related females, possibly facilitating the evolution of cooperation. Within such a home area females were more likely to nest communally when the general relatedness of her available options was relatively high. Females formed communal nests with females that were familiar through previous associations and had young pups of usually less than 5 days old.
Our findings suggest that communal nursing was not a by-product of sharing the same nesting sites, but females choose communal nursing partners from a group of genetically similar females, and ultimately the decision may then depend on the pool of options available. Social partner choice proved to be an integrated part of cooperation among females, and might allow females to reduce the conflict over number of offspring in a communal nest and milk investment towards own and other offspring. We suggest that social partner choice may be a general mechanism to stabilize costly cooperation.
家鼠的群体哺乳是一种合作行为,即雌性将幼崽集中在同一个巢穴中,不加区分地哺育自己和其他雌性的后代,尽管可能存在被利用的情况。实验室研究显示,群体哺乳带来的直接适应性益处表明它是雌性家鼠繁殖行为中经过选择的组成部分。然而,过去对自由生活种群中群体哺乳的研究一直在争论这是共享同一巢穴的结果还是一种主动选择。在此,我们利用对自由生活的野生家鼠的长期研究数据,调查了个体的哺乳决策,并确定了影响雌性进行群体哺乳决策的因素。
雌性选择单独哺乳的频率高于随机预期,但当有更多伙伴可供选择时,单独哺乳的可能性会降低。虽然未发现成对亲缘关系对伙伴选择有影响,但我们观察到雌性与基因相似的个体共享其社会环境,这表明雌性的栖息地由有亲缘关系的雌性组成,这可能促进了合作的进化。在这样的栖息地内,当可选择伙伴的总体亲缘关系相对较高时,雌性更有可能共同筑巢。雌性会与通过先前交往而熟悉且幼崽通常小于5天大的雌性共同筑巢。
我们的研究结果表明,群体哺乳不是共享同一筑巢地点的副产品,而是雌性从一群基因相似的雌性中选择群体哺乳伙伴,最终的决策可能取决于可用的选择范围。社会伙伴选择被证明是雌性之间合作的一个组成部分,并且可能使雌性减少在共同巢穴中关于后代数量以及对自己和其他后代乳汁投入的冲突。我们认为社会伙伴选择可能是稳定代价高昂的合作的一种普遍机制。