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The effect of social group size on feather corticosterone in the co-operatively breeding Smooth-billed Ani (Crotophaga ani): An assay validation and analysis of extreme social living

机译:社会群体规模对合作繁殖的光滑嘴茴香(Crotophaga ani)羽毛皮质酮的影响:极端社会生活的分析验证和分析

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摘要

Living closely with others can provide a myriad of fitness benefits, from shared territory defense to co-operative resource acquisition. Costs of social aggregation are not absent, however, and likely influence optimal and observed groups’ sizes in a social species. Here, we explored optimal group size in a joint-nesting cuckoo species (the Smooth-billed Ani, Crotophaga ani) using endocrine markers of stress physiology (corticosterone, or CORT). Smooth-billed Anis exhibit intense reproductive competition that is exacerbated in atypically large groups. We therefore hypothesized that intra-group competition (measured by social group size) mediates the desirability and physiological cost of social group membership in this species. To test this hypothesis, we captured 47 adult Smooth-billed Anis (31 males, 16 females) during the breeding seasons of 2012-2014 in south-western Puerto Rico, and documented social group sizes. Tail feathers were sampled and used to quantify CORT (pg/mg) in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) (n = 50). Our analyses show significant differences in feather-CORT of adults between categorical group sizes, with individuals from atypically large social groups (≥ x + 1SD) having highest mean concentrations (33.319 pg/mg), and individuals from atypically small social groups (≤ x − 1SD) having lowest mean concentrations (8.969 pg/mg). Whether reproductive competition or effort is responsible for elevated CORT in atypically large social groups, however, remains unclear. Our results suggest that living in atypically large groups is physiologically expensive and may represent an evolutionarily unstable strategy. To our knowledge, this is the first study to explore a correlation between stress physiology and group size in a joint-nesting species.
机译:从共享的区域防御到合作资源的获取,与他人紧密生活可以提供各种健身益处。但是,社会聚集的成本并不存在,并且可能影响一个社会物种中最佳群体和观察群体的规模。在这里,我们使用应激生理学的内分泌标志物(皮质酮或CORT)探索了联合嵌套杜鹃物种(平滑嘴杜鹃,番红花ani)的最佳群体大小。光滑嘴的阿尼斯(Anis)表现出强烈的生殖竞争,在非典型大群体中加剧。因此,我们假设群体内部竞争(通过社会群体规模来衡量)介导了该物种中社会群体成员的期望和生理成本。为了检验该假设,我们在波多黎各西南部2012-2014的繁殖季节捕获了47只成年成年扁嘴Anis(男31例,女16例),并记录了社会群体的大小。对尾羽进行采样,并在酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)(n = 50)中用于定量CORT(pg / mg)。我们的分析显示,在不同类别的人群之间,成年人的羽毛CORT存在显着差异,来自非典型大社会群体(≥x + 1SD)的个体平均浓度最高(33.319 pg / mg),来自非典型小社会群体的个体(≤x − 1SD)的最低平均浓度(8.969 pg / mg)。然而,生殖竞争或努力是否是导致非典型大社会群体CORT升高的原因尚不清楚。我们的结果表明,生活在非典型群体中在生理上是昂贵的,并且可能代表了进化上不稳定的策略。据我们所知,这是第一个研究应力生理与联合嵌套物种的群体大小之间的相关性的研究。

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