Live long and prosper: durable benefits of early-life care in banded mongooses
Vitikainen, E; Thompson, F; Marshall, H; et al.Cant, MA
Date: 25 February 2019
Journal
Philosophical Transactions B: Biological Sciences
Publisher
Royal Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Kin selection theory defines the conditions for which altruism or ‘helping’ can be favoured by
natural selection. Tests of this theory in cooperatively breeding animals have focused on the
short-term benefits to the recipients of help, such as improved growth or survival to
adulthood. However, research on early life effects suggests ...
Kin selection theory defines the conditions for which altruism or ‘helping’ can be favoured by
natural selection. Tests of this theory in cooperatively breeding animals have focused on the
short-term benefits to the recipients of help, such as improved growth or survival to
adulthood. However, research on early life effects suggests that there may be more
durable, lifelong fitness impacts to the recipients of help, which in theory should strengthen
selection for helping. Here we show in cooperatively breeding banded mongooses (Mungos
mungo) that care received in the first three months of life has lifelong fitness benefits for
both males and female recipients. In this species adult helpers called ‘escorts’ form
exclusive one-to-one caring relationships with specific pups (not their own offspring),
allowing us to isolate the effects of being escorted on later reproduction and survival. Pups
that were more closely escorted were heavier at sexual maturity, which was associated with higher lifetime reproductive success for both sexes. Moreover, for female offspring, lifetime
reproductive success increased with the level of escorting received per se, over and above
any effect on body mass. Our results suggest that early life social care has durable benefits
to offspring of both sexes in this species. Given the well-established developmental effects
of early life care in lab animals and humans, we suggest that similar effects are likely to be
widespread in social animals more generally. We discuss some of the implications of
durable fitness benefits for the evolution of intergenerational helping in cooperative animal
societies, including humans
Biosciences - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0