4.5 Article

Tug-of-war over reproduction in a cooperatively breeding cichlid

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Volume 62, Issue 8, Pages 1249-1257

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-008-0553-0

Keywords

cooperation; cooperative breeding; reproductive skew; egg cannibalism; growth; status; Cichlidae

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In group-living animals, dominants may suppress subordinate reproduction directly and indirectly, thereby skewing reproduction in their favour. In this study, we show experimentally that this ability ('power') is influenced by resource distribution and the body size difference between unrelated dominants and subordinates in the cichlid Neolamprologus pulcher. Reproduction was strongly skewed towards the dominant female, due to these females producing more and larger clutches and those clutches surviving egg eating better than those of subordinate females, but was not so when subordinates defended a patch. If breeding shelters were provided in two patches, subordinate females were more likely to exclusively defend a patch against the dominant female and breed, compared to when the same breeding resource was provided in one patch. Relatively large subordinate females were more likely to defend a patch and reproduce. Females also directly interfered with each other's reproduction by eating the competitors' eggs, at which dominants were more successful. Although dominant females benefited from subordinate females due to alloparental care and an increase in egg mass, they also showed costs due to reduced growth in the presence of subordinates. The results support the view that the dominant's power to control subordinate reproduction determines reproductive partitioning, in agreement with the predictions from tug-of-war models of reproductive skew.

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