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Variation in growth of Damaraland mole-rats is explained by competition rather than by functional specialization for different tasks

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Zöttl, M 
Gaynor, D 
Bennett, NC 
Clutton-Brock, Timothy  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8110-8969

Abstract

In some eusocial insect societies, adaptation to the division of labour results in multimodal size variation among workers. It has been suggested that variation in size and growth among non-breeders in naked and Damaraland mole-rats may similarly reflect functional divergence associated with different cooperative tasks. However, it is unclear whether individual growth rates are multimodally distributed (as would be expected if variation in growth is associated with specialization for different tasks) or whether variation in growth is unimodally distributed, and is related to differences in the social and physical environment (as would be predicted if there are individual differences in growth but no discrete differences in developmental pathways). Here, we show that growth trajectories of non-breeding Damaraland mole-rats vary widely, and that their distribution is unimodal, contrary to the suggestion that variation in growth is the result of differentiation into discrete castes. Though there is no evidence of discrete variation in growth, social factors appear to exert important effects on growth rates and age-specific size, which are both reduced in large social groups.

Description

Keywords

growth, division of labour, cooperative breeding, eusociality

Journal Title

Biology Letters

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1744-9561
1744-957X

Volume Title

12

Publisher

Royal Society Publishing
Sponsorship
European Research Council (294494)
This study was funded by an European Research Council grant to THCB (294494).