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Communal roosting shows dynamics predicted by direct and indirect nepotism in chestnut-crowned babblers

机译:公共植物节目显示了栗子 - 加冕乳药中直接和间接射出的动态

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Family living is a stepping stone to higher-order social structures including cooperatively breeding groups, but understanding why offspring remain with parents by delaying dispersal remains a challenge. One rarely studied aspect of family living is communal huddle roosting, where individuals group together overnight for thermoregulatory and/or anti-predator benefits. Here, we use a PIT-tag detection system to investigate the potential for direct and indirect nepotism in roosting huddles of cooperatively breeding chestnut-crowned babblers (Pomatostomus ruficeps) living in extended families with female immigrants. This species habitually roosts communally in single-chambered domed nests; an average of 8.5 ( 4.4 SD) individuals taking similar to 6 min to enter roost nests roosted together in this study. We found that the order in which individuals settled in the roost was negatively associated with their exit order, and those settling late were more likely to be detected at the nest entrance during the night, suggesting that settlement order influences individual roosting positions. Juveniles entered the roost in mid-rank positions, and their entries were associated with increased activity levels of carers, suggesting direct nepotistic assistance. In addition, immigrant females more often settled in the roosts later than others, suggesting indirect nepotism through exclusion of immigrants from more central roosting positions. This exclusion was not obviously confounded by age or sex. As those settling later are expected to experience reduced thermoregulatory benefits and increased predation risk, our results suggest that direct and indirect nepotistic benefits during communal roosting might offer part of the explanation for family living through delayed dispersal in this species.
机译:家庭生活是通往更高阶社会结构(包括合作繁殖群体)的垫脚石,但理解为什么后代通过延迟传播而留在父母身边仍然是一个挑战。家庭生活中一个很少被研究的方面是集体蜷缩栖息,个体在夜间聚集在一起,以调节体温和/或对抗捕食者。在这里,我们使用一个PIT标签检测系统来调查合作繁殖的栗冠狒狒(Pomatostomus ruficeps)在与女性移民的大家庭中的栖息群中直接和间接裙带关系的可能性。该物种习惯于在单室穹顶巢穴中共同栖息;在这项研究中,平均有8.5(4.4 SD)个个体需要6分钟的时间才能进入一起栖息的鸟巢。我们发现,个体在巢穴中定居的顺序与它们的离开顺序呈负相关,而那些定居晚的个体更有可能在夜间在巢穴入口处被发现,这表明定居顺序影响个体的栖息位置。青少年以中级职位入驻,他们的入驻与看护者的活动水平增加有关,这表明他们有直接的裙带关系帮助。此外,移民女性比其他女性更经常晚到栖息地定居,这表明通过将移民排除在更中心的栖息地位置而产生的间接裙带关系。这种排斥并没有明显因年龄或性别而混淆。由于那些定居较晚的物种预计会经历温度调节效益降低和捕食风险增加,我们的结果表明,在公共栖息期间,直接和间接的裙带关系效益可能为该物种通过延迟扩散而生活的家庭提供了部分解释。

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