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Dominance-related contributions to collective territory defence are adjusted according to the threat

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

York, JE 
Young, AJ 

Abstract

Across diverse societies, group members benefit from the cooperative maintenance of a shared territory (a public good). How such public goods are maintained has received extensive interest, yet individual contributions to cooperative territory defence remain poorly understood. Recent theory predicts that, in groups with social hierarchies, privileged individuals will contribute most to competition with rival groups as they benefit most from defence of the territory. Here, we investigate whether dominant individuals contribute more to territory defence in a group-territorial bird in which dominants monopolise within-group reproduction; the white-browed sparrow weaver (Plocepasser mahali). Using simulated territorial intrusions, we demonstrate that dominants contribute significantly more than subordinates to territory defence. We also demonstrate that individual contributions are adjusted according to threat: males of both social classes significantly and similarly increased their contributions to defence in response to a high threat (playback of an unfamiliar pair’s duet, rather than that of a neighbouring pair), which was associated with a stronger collective response by the group. Thus, while dominants contribute most as predicted by the asymmetry in benefits, subordinates do increase contributions when they are needed most (in small groups and under greater threat). Contributions by subordinates when needed most also highlights that dominants could still benefit substantially from tolerating the presence of subordinates despite their overall lower contributions. Our results show that public goods can be maintained despite unequal contributions, and highlight the potential importance of context-dependent behavioural flexibility in mitigating collective action problems.

Description

Keywords

animal societies, behavioural flexibility, collective action problem, cooperation, free riding, free-rider problem, individual contributions, plasticity, social evolution, territory defence

Journal Title

Animal Behaviour

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0003-3472
1095-8282

Volume Title

158

Publisher

Elsevier BV