Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2021 Apr 26;376(1823):20190742. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0742. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
In many species that raise young in cooperative groups, breeders live an exceptionally long time despite high investment in offspring production. How is this possible given the expected trade-off between survival and reproduction? One possibility is that breeders extend their lifespans by outsourcing parental care to non-reproductive group members. Having help lightens breeder workloads and the energy that is saved can be allocated to survival instead. We tested this hypothesis using phylogenetic meta-analysis across 23 cooperatively breeding bird species. We found that breeders with helpers had higher rates of annual survival than those without helpers (8% on average). Increased breeder survival was correlated with reduced investment in feeding offspring, which in turn depended on the proportion of feeding provided by helpers. Helpers had similar effects on female and male breeder survival. Our results indicate that one of the secrets to a long life is reduced investment in parental care. This appears to be a unique feature of cooperative societies with hard-working helpers. This article is part of the theme issue 'Ageing and sociality: why, when and how does sociality change ageing patterns?'
在许多通过合作群体养育后代的物种中,尽管亲代在繁殖后代方面投入巨大,但繁殖者的寿命却异常长。考虑到生存和繁殖之间的预期权衡,这是如何实现的?一种可能性是,繁殖者通过将亲代照顾外包给非繁殖的群体成员来延长寿命。有了帮助,繁殖者的工作负担就减轻了,节省下来的能量可以用于生存。我们使用 23 种合作繁殖的鸟类物种的系统发育荟萃分析来检验这一假设。我们发现,有帮手的繁殖者的年存活率高于没有帮手的繁殖者(平均 8%)。繁殖者存活率的提高与喂养后代的投入减少有关,而喂养后代的投入又取决于帮手提供的喂养比例。帮手对雌性和雄性繁殖者的存活率都有类似的影响。我们的研究结果表明,长寿的秘诀之一是减少对亲代养育的投入。这似乎是具有勤劳帮手的合作社会的一个独特特征。本文是“衰老与社会性:为什么、何时以及社会性如何改变衰老模式?”这一主题专辑的一部分。