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Contributions of genetic and non‐genetic sources to variation in cooperative behaviour in a cooperative mammal

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posted on 2025-08-01, 13:19 authored by TM Houslay, JF Nielsen, TH Clutton‐Brock
The evolution of cooperative behavior is a major area of research among evolutionary biologists and behavioral ecologists, yet there are few estimates of its heritability or its evolutionary potential, and long-term studies of identifiable individuals are required to disentangle genetic and nongenetic components of cooperative behavior. Here, we use long-term data on over 1800 individually recognizable wild meerkats (Suricata suricatta) collected over 30 years and a multigenerational genetic pedigree to partition phenotypic variation in three cooperative behaviors (babysitting, pup feeding, and sentinel behavior) into individual, additive genetic, and other sources, and to assess their repeatability and heritability. In addition to strong effects of sex, age, and dominance status, we found significant repeatability in individual contributions to all three types of cooperative behavior both within and across breeding seasons. Like most other studies of the heritability of social behavior, we found that the heritability of cooperative behavior was low. However, our analysis suggests that a substantial component of the repeatable individual differences in cooperative behavior that we observed was a consequence of additive genetic variation. Our results consequently indicate that cooperative behavior can respond to selection, and suggest scope for further exploration of the genetic basis of social behavior

Funding

294494

742808

European Union Horizon 2020

Human Frontier Science Program

Mammal Research Institute at the University of Pretoria, South Africa

RGP0051/2017

Swiss National Science Foundation

University of Zurich.

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© 2021 Wiley

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record Data archiving: Data and code for reproducing the main analyses are available through the Dryad Digital Repository database (https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.cfxpnvx68). The data and code for the meta-analysis of heritability estimates of selected traits in wild mammals are available in Files S3–S5.

Journal

Evolution

Publisher

Wiley / Society for the Study of Evolution (SSE)

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  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2021-10-21T10:27:00Z

FOA date

2022-10-13T23:00:00Z

Citation

Published online 14 October 2021

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