4.0 Article

Within-population variation in social strategies characterize the social and mating system of an Australian lizard, Egernia whitii

Journal

AUSTRAL ECOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 8, Pages 938-949

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2009.02002.x

Keywords

extra-pair paternity; parental care; reptiles; social evolution; White's skink

Categories

Funding

  1. Holsworth Wildlife Research Fund
  2. Environmental Futures Network
  3. Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour
  4. Joyce Vickery Research Fund
  5. Ecological Society of Australia
  6. Australian Society of Herpetologists
  7. Australian Research Council
  8. Wenner-Gren Foundations

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The lizard genus Egernia has been suggested as an excellent model system for examining the evolution of sociality as it exhibits considerable diversity in social organization both between and within species. To date the majority of work examining the factors responsible for the evolution of sociality within Egernia has advocated a broad scale approach; identifying the social structure of specific species or populations and comparing the degree of sociality between them. However, we argue that significant advancements could also be gained by examining variation in social strategies within populations. Here we integrate a detailed, 3-year, field-based examination of social spacing and juvenile dispersal with molecular analyses of paternity to determine the social and mating system of a Tasmanian population of White's skink (Egernia whitii). We show that E. whitii live in small stable family groups consisting of an adult male, his female partner(s), as well as juvenile or sub-adults individuals. In addition, while the mating system is characterized by considerable genetic monogamy, extra-pair fertilizations are relatively common, with 34% of litters containing offspring sired by males from outside the social group. We also show that traits related to social organization (social group composition, group size, stability and the level of extra-pair paternity) vary both between and within individuals. We suggest that ecological factors, such as habitat saturation, quality and availability, play a key role in maintaining between individual variation in social strategies, and that examining these individual level processes will allow us to more clearly understand variation in sociality among species.

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