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Early growth, dominance acquisition and lifetime reproductive success in male and female cooperative meerkats.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

English, Sinead 
Huchard, Elise 
Nielsen, Johanna F 
Clutton-Brock, Tim H 

Abstract

In polygynous species, variance in reproductive success is higher in males than females. There is consequently stronger selection for competitive traits in males and early growth can have a greater influence on later fitness in males than in females. As yet, little is known about sex differences in the effect of early growth on subsequent breeding success in species where variance in reproductive success is higher in females than males, and competitive traits are under stronger selection in females. Greater variance in reproductive success has been documented in several singular cooperative breeders. Here, we investigated consequences of early growth for later reproductive success in wild meerkats. We found that, despite the absence of dimorphism, females who exhibited faster growth until nutritional independence were more likely to become dominant, whereas early growth did not affect dominance acquisition in males. Among those individuals who attained dominance, there was no further influence of early growth on dominance tenure or lifetime reproductive success in males or females. These findings suggest that early growth effects on competitive abilities and fitness may reflect the intensity of intrasexual competition even in sexually monomorphic species.

Description

Keywords

Cooperative breeders, early development, female competition, reproductive success

Journal Title

Ecol Evol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2045-7758
2045-7758

Volume Title

3

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/G006822/1)