4.8 Article

Egalitarianism in female African lions

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 293, Issue 5530, Pages 690-693

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1062320

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Because most cooperative societies are despotic, it has been difficult to test models of egalitarianism. Female African lions demonstrate a unique form of plural breeding in which companions consistently produce similar numbers of surviving offspring. Consistent with theoretical predictions from models of reproductive skew, female lions are unable to control each other's reproduction because of high costs of fighting and low access to each other's newborn cubs. A female also tacks incentives to reduce her companions' reproduction, because her own survival and reproduction depend on group territoriality and synchronous breeding. Consequently, female relationships are highly symmetrical, and female lions are free agents who only contribute to communal care when they have cubs of their own.

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