AI Article Synopsis

  • Ecological conditions significantly impact individual investment in cooperative care, but their effects can be both positive and negative, leading to mixed findings in research.
  • Recent studies suggest that increased ecological variability, rather than just average conditions, encourages helping behavior, though this has not been empirically tested at the individual level.
  • A long-term study of banded mongooses reveals that greater rainfall variability affects female body condition and survival, leading to older males increasing their helping behavior due to fewer mating opportunities, highlighting how individual sensitivity to environmental changes influences social dynamics and cooperative behaviors.

Article Abstract

Ecological conditions are expected to have an important influence on individuals' investment in cooperative care. However, the nature of their effects is unclear: both favorable and unfavorable conditions have been found to promote helping behavior. Recent studies provide a possible explanation for these conflicting results by suggesting that increased ecological variability, rather than changes in mean conditions, promote cooperative care. However, no study has tested whether increased ecological variability promotes individual-level helping behavior or the mechanisms involved. We test this hypothesis in a long-term study population of the cooperatively breeding banded mongoose, , using 14 years of behavioral and meteorological data to explore how the mean and variability of ecological conditions influence individual behavior, body condition, and survival. Female body condition was more sensitive to changes in rainfall leading to poorer female survival and pronounced male-biased group compositions after periods of high rainfall variability. After such periods, older males invested more in helping behavior, potentially because they had fewer mating opportunities. These results provide the first empirical evidence for increased individual helping effort in more variable ecological conditions and suggest this arises because of individual differences in the effect of ecological conditions on body condition and survival, and the knock-on effect on social group composition. Individual differences in sensitivity to environmental variability, and the impacts this has on the internal structure and composition of animal groups, can exert a strong influence on the evolution and maintenance of social behaviors, such as cooperative care.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943108PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/beheco/arw006DOI Listing

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