4.5 Article

Nepotistic access to food resources in cooperatively breeding carrion crows

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue 9, Pages 1791-1800

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-011-1187-1

Keywords

Delayed dispersal; Nepotism; Parental facilitation; Territory quality; Carrion crow; Corvus corone

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [CGL2005-02083/BOS, CGL2008-01829BOS, SEJ2007-29836-E]
  2. Junta de Castilla y Leon [VA001A05]
  3. Xunta de Galicia

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Offspring delayed dispersal is the principal mechanism leading to formation of kin-based societies. It has been suggested that parents promote offspring philopatry by providing them with preferential access to the food resources of the territory and that parental tolerance may be affected by territory quality. However, few studies have addressed this hypothesis in kin-living vertebrate species. Here, we show that in cooperative breeding groups of carrion crows (Corvus corone corone) containing retained offspring and immigrants, dominant breeding males behaved nepotistically on an experimental source of food by (1) attacking immigrants with more frequency and intensity than offspring and (2) associating preferentially with their offspring on the feeding spot and sharing food with them. This parental facilitation allowed the offspring to spend more time feeding than higher-rank immigrants. We also found that a year-round experimental food supplementation neither increased breeding males' tolerance nor relented the overall aggressiveness in the groups. This indicates that higher natal philopatry observed on fed territories compared to unfed ones is not a consequence of a more benign social environment. Rather, it suggests that offspring value territory resource wealth and adjust the timing of dispersal accordingly.

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