Literature DB >> 28812731

Cooperation facilitates the colonization of harsh environments.

Charlie K Cornwallis1, Carlos A Botero2, Dustin R Rubenstein3, Philip A Downing4, Stuart A West4, Ashleigh S Griffin4.   

Abstract

Animals living in harsh environments, where temperatures are hot and rainfall is unpredictable, are more likely to breed in cooperative groups. As a result, harsh environmental conditions have been accepted as a key factor explaining the evolution of cooperation. However, this is based on evidence that has not investigated the order of evolutionary events, so the inferred causality could be incorrect. We resolved this problem using phylogenetic analyses of 4,707 bird species and found that causation was in the opposite direction to that previously assumed. Rather than harsh environments favouring cooperation, cooperative breeding has facilitated the colonization of harsh environments. Cooperative breeding was, in fact, more likely to evolve from ancestors occupying relatively cool environmental niches with predictable rainfall, which had low levels of polyandry and hence high within-group relatedness. We also found that polyandry increased after cooperative breeders invaded harsh environments, suggesting that when helpers have limited options to breed independently, polyandry no longer destabilizes cooperation. This provides an explanation for the puzzling cases of polyandrous cooperative breeding birds. More generally, this illustrates how cooperation can play a key role in invading ecological niches, a pattern observed across all levels of biological organization from cells to animal societies.

Year:  2017        PMID: 28812731     DOI: 10.1038/s41559-016-0057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol        ISSN: 2397-334X            Impact factor:   15.460


  18 in total

1.  Ecological conditions alter cooperative behaviour and its costs in a chemically defended sawfly.

Authors:  Carita Lindstedt; Antti Miettinen; Dalial Freitak; Tarmo Ketola; Andres López-Sepulcre; Elina Mäntylä; Hannu Pakkanen
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2018-08-01       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Hamilton's inclusive fitness maintains heritable altruism polymorphism through rb = c.

Authors:  Changcao Wang; Xin Lu
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-01-02       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  High temperatures drive offspring mortality in a cooperatively breeding bird.

Authors:  Amanda R Bourne; Susan J Cunningham; Claire N Spottiswoode; Amanda R Ridley
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2020-07-29       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Plasticity in social behaviour varies with reproductive status in an avian cooperative breeder.

Authors:  Jasmine Little; Dustin R Rubenstein; Sarah Guindre-Parker
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2022-05-04       Impact factor: 5.530

5.  Winter is coming: harsh environments limit independent reproduction of cooperative-breeding queens in a socially polymorphic ant.

Authors:  Ornela De Gasperin; Pierre Blacher; Guglielmo Grasso; Michel Chapuisat
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2020-01-22       Impact factor: 3.703

6.  Population level consequences of facultatively cooperative behaviour in a stochastic environment.

Authors:  Michela Busana; Dylan Z Childs; Terrence A Burke; Jan Komdeur; David S Richardson; Hannah L Dugdale
Journal:  J Anim Ecol       Date:  2021-11-14       Impact factor: 5.606

7.  Disentangling climatic and nest predator impact on reproductive output reveals adverse high-temperature effects regardless of helper number in an arid-region cooperative bird.

Authors:  Pietro B D'Amelio; André C Ferreira; Rita Fortuna; Matthieu Paquet; Liliana R Silva; Franck Theron; Claire Doutrelant; Rita Covas
Journal:  Ecol Lett       Date:  2021-11-17       Impact factor: 11.274

8.  Multiple benefits of alloparental care in a fluctuating environment.

Authors:  Sarah Guindre-Parker; Dustin R Rubenstein
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 2.963

9.  Huddling remodels gut microbiota to reduce energy requirements in a small mammal species during cold exposure.

Authors:  Xue-Ying Zhang; Gansukh Sukhchuluun; Ting-Bei Bo; Qing-Sheng Chi; Jun-Jie Yang; Bin Chen; Lei Zhang; De-Hua Wang
Journal:  Microbiome       Date:  2018-06-08       Impact factor: 14.650

10.  Genome reduction and relaxed selection is associated with the transition to symbiosis in the basidiomycete genus Podaxis.

Authors:  Benjamin H Conlon; Cene Gostinčar; Janis Fricke; Nina B Kreuzenbeck; Jan-Martin Daniel; Malte S L Schlosser; Nils Peereboom; Duur K Aanen; Z Wilhelm de Beer; Christine Beemelmanns; Nina Gunde-Cimerman; Michael Poulsen
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2021-06-01
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