Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Penryn, United Kingdom.
Current address: School of Biodiversity, One Health and Veterinary Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
PLoS Biol. 2023 Nov 9;21(11):e3002356. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002356. eCollection 2023 Nov.
In many cooperative societies, including our own, helpers assist with the post-natal care of breeders' young and may thereby benefit the post-natal development of offspring. Here, we present evidence of a novel mechanism by which such post-natal helping could also have beneficial effects on pre-natal development: By lightening post-natal maternal workloads, helpers may allow mothers to increase their pre-natal investment per offspring. We present the findings of a decade-long study of cooperatively breeding white-browed sparrow-weaver, Plocepasser mahali, societies. Within each social group, reproduction is monopolized by a dominant breeding pair, and non-breeding helpers assist with nestling feeding. Using a within-mother reaction norm approach to formally identify maternal plasticity, we demonstrate that when mothers have more female helpers, they decrease their own post-natal investment per offspring (feed their nestlings at lower rates) but increase their pre-natal investment per offspring (lay larger eggs, which yield heavier hatchlings). That these plastic maternal responses are predicted by female helper number, and not male helper number, implicates the availability of post-natal helping per se as the likely driver (rather than correlated effects of group size), because female helpers feed nestlings at substantially higher rates than males. We term this novel maternal strategy "maternal front-loading" and hypothesize that the expected availability of post-natal help either allows or incentivizes helped mothers to focus maternal investment on the pre-natal phase, to which helpers cannot contribute directly. The potential for post-natal helping to promote pre-natal development further complicates attempts to identify and quantify the fitness consequences of helping.
在许多合作社会中,包括我们自己的社会,帮手会协助繁殖者的幼崽进行产后护理,从而有助于后代的产后发育。在这里,我们提出了一个新的机制的证据,通过这种产后帮助也可以对产前发育产生有益的影响:通过减轻产后母亲的工作量,帮手可以让母亲增加每个后代的产前投资。我们介绍了一项长达十年的合作繁殖白眉麻雀织布鸟(Plocepasser mahali)社会研究的结果。在每个社会群体中,繁殖都是由一对占主导地位的繁殖对垄断的,非繁殖的帮手协助育雏。我们使用了一种母体内反应规范方法来正式确定母体的可塑性,结果表明,当母亲有更多的雌性帮手时,它们会减少每个后代的产后投资(以较低的速度喂养雏鸟),但会增加每个后代的产前投资(产更大的卵,从而产生更重的雏鸟)。这些可塑的母体反应是由雌性帮手的数量预测的,而不是雄性帮手的数量预测的,这暗示了产后帮助本身的可用性很可能是驱动因素(而不是群体大小的相关影响),因为雌性帮手喂养雏鸟的速度远远高于雄性。我们将这种新的母体策略称为“母体前置”,并假设产后帮助的预期可用性允许或激励受助母亲将母性投资集中在产前阶段,而帮手不能直接做出贡献。产后帮助促进产前发育的潜力进一步使识别和量化帮助的适应度后果的尝试复杂化。