4.5 Article

Reproductive suppression in female cooperatively breeding cichlids

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 4, Issue 6, Pages 606-609

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2008.0365

Keywords

reproductive competition; cooperative breeding; dominance; body size; Cichlidae

Funding

  1. SNF [3100A0-108473]

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Suppression by dominants of female subordinate reproduction has been found in many vertebrate social groups, but has rarely been shown experimentally. Here experimental evidence is provided for reproductive suppression in the group-living Lake Tanganyika cichlid Neolamprologus pulcher. Within groups of three unrelated females, suppression was due to medium- and small-sized females laying less frequently compared with large females, and compared with medium females in control pairs. Clutch size and average egg mass of all females depended on body size, but not on rank. In a second step, a large female was removed from the group and a very small female was added to keep the group size constant. The medium females immediately seized the dominant breeding position in the group and started to reproduce as frequently as control pairs, whereas clutch size and egg mass did not change. These results show that female subordinate cichlids are reproductively capable, but apparently suppressed with respect to egg laying. Nevertheless, some reproduction is tolerated, possibly to ensure continued alloparental care by subordinate females.

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