| Literature DB >> 31818941 |
Stuart Nattrass1,2, Darren P Croft3, Samuel Ellis3, Michael A Cant4, Michael N Weiss3,5, Brianna M Wright6, Eva Stredulinsky6, Thomas Doniol-Valcroze6, John K B Ford6, Kenneth C Balcomb5, Daniel W Franks7,2.
Abstract
Understanding why females of some mammalian species cease ovulation prior to the end of life is a long-standing interdisciplinary and evolutionary challenge. In humans and some species of toothed whales, females can live for decades after stopping reproduction. This unusual life history trait is thought to have evolved, in part, due to the inclusive fitness benefits that postreproductive females gain by helping kin. In humans, grandmothers gain inclusive fitness benefits by increasing their number of surviving grandoffspring, referred to as the grandmother effect. Among toothed whales, the grandmother effect has not been rigorously tested. Here, we test for the grandmother effect in killer whales, by quantifying grandoffspring survival with living or recently deceased reproductive and postreproductive grandmothers, and show that postreproductive grandmothers provide significant survival benefits to their grandoffspring above that provided by reproductive grandmothers. This provides evidence of the grandmother effect in a nonhuman menopausal species. By stopping reproduction, grandmothers avoid reproductive conflict with their daughters, and offer increased benefits to their grandoffspring. The benefits postreproductive grandmothers provide to their grandoffspring are shown to be most important in difficult times where the salmon abundance is low to moderate. The postreproductive grandmother effect we report, together with the known costs of late-life reproduction in killer whales, can help explain the long postreproductive life spans of resident killer whales.Entities:
Keywords: grandmother effect; grandmothering; killer whales; menopause; postreproductive life span
Year: 2019 PMID: 31818941 PMCID: PMC6936675 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1903844116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.Example survival trajectories for (A) a 5-y-old whale, (B) a 15-y-old whale, and (C) a 20-y-old whale, when their grandmother is alive (red line/circles), when their reproductive grandmother has recently died (blue line/squares), and when their postreproductive grandmother has recently died (green line/triangles), where the salmon index is fixed at 1 across all years. Survival is derived from the best-fitting extended Cox proportional hazards model for grandoffspring experiencing their grandmother’s death at different ages (ages are in years). Insert shows grandmother J19 with her grandoffspring J51.