1. Top males gain high reproductive success by guarding more successful females in a cooperatively breeding mongoose
- Author
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Nichols, Hazel J., Amos, William, Cant, Michael A., Bell, Matthew B.V., and Hodge, Sarah J.
- Subjects
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BANDED mongoose , *COOPERATIVE breeding in animals , *INTERSEXUALITY in animals , *ANIMAL sexual behavior , *ANIMAL courtship , *ANIMAL paternity , *REPRODUCTION , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Of key importance for understanding cooperative societies is the way in which reproductive opportunities are distributed among group members. Traditionally, skew has been thought of as a product of intrasexual competition. However, cooperatively breeding species often live in mixed-sex groups, so the behaviour of one sex has the potential to influence skew in the other. We addressed the importance of inter- and intrasexual conflict in determining reproductive skew through a study of paternity sharing in the cooperatively breeding banded mongoose, Mungus mungo. Unlike banded mongoose females, where reproductive skew is low, males exhibited high skew, with 85% of paternities being assigned to the three oldest males in each group. Individual males appeared unable to monopolize reproduction because females come into oestrus in synchrony and mate multiply. Instead, older males increased their success by mate guarding the oldest, most fecund females. Our findings therefore highlight the importance of mate choice in males and reveal the behavioural differences between the sexes that generate reproductive skew. They also emphasize the considerable influence that female behaviour can have on male reproductive skew. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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