Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- 1 The Study of Mammalian Cooperative Breeding
- 2 The Bioenergetics of Parental Behavior and the Evolution of Alloparental Care in Marmosets and Tamarins
- 3 Proximate Regulation of Singular Breeding in Callitrichid Primates
- 4 Cooperative Breeding, Reproductive Suppression, and Body Mass in Canids
- 5 Hormonal and Experiential Factors in the Expression of Social and Parental Behavior in Canids
- 6 Variation in Reproductive Suppression among Dwarf Mongooses: Interplay between Mechanisms and Evolution
- 7 Dynamic Optimization and Cooperative Breeding: An Evaluation of Future Fitness Effects
- 8 Examination of Alternative Hypotheses for Cooperative Breeding in Rodents
- 9 The Psychobiological Basis of Cooperative Breeding in Rodents
- 10 Cooperative Breeding in Naked Mole-Rats: Implications for Vertebrate and Invertebrate Sociality
- 11 The Physiology of a Reproductive Dictatorship: Regulation of Male and Female Reproduction by a Single Breeding Female in Colonies of Naked Mole-Rats
- 12 Factors Influencing the Occurrence of Communal Care in Plural Breeding Mammals
- 13 A Bird's-Eye View of Mammalian Cooperative Breeding
- Index
1 - The Study of Mammalian Cooperative Breeding
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- 1 The Study of Mammalian Cooperative Breeding
- 2 The Bioenergetics of Parental Behavior and the Evolution of Alloparental Care in Marmosets and Tamarins
- 3 Proximate Regulation of Singular Breeding in Callitrichid Primates
- 4 Cooperative Breeding, Reproductive Suppression, and Body Mass in Canids
- 5 Hormonal and Experiential Factors in the Expression of Social and Parental Behavior in Canids
- 6 Variation in Reproductive Suppression among Dwarf Mongooses: Interplay between Mechanisms and Evolution
- 7 Dynamic Optimization and Cooperative Breeding: An Evaluation of Future Fitness Effects
- 8 Examination of Alternative Hypotheses for Cooperative Breeding in Rodents
- 9 The Psychobiological Basis of Cooperative Breeding in Rodents
- 10 Cooperative Breeding in Naked Mole-Rats: Implications for Vertebrate and Invertebrate Sociality
- 11 The Physiology of a Reproductive Dictatorship: Regulation of Male and Female Reproduction by a Single Breeding Female in Colonies of Naked Mole-Rats
- 12 Factors Influencing the Occurrence of Communal Care in Plural Breeding Mammals
- 13 A Bird's-Eye View of Mammalian Cooperative Breeding
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Behavioral biologists and comparative psychologists have long been interested in species that display a social system labeled “cooperative breeding”, in which members of the social group assist in rearing young that are not their own offspring. The definitional hallmarks of cooperative breeding concentrate on the distinctive attributes of these care-giving individuals, and they include (1) delayed dispersal from the natal group, (2) reproductive suppression, and (3) care for others' offspring. The individuals engaging in care of young may be nonbreeding adults or subadults (usually called helpers, auxiliaries, or alloparents), or they may be reproductive adults sharing in the care of young with other breeders in the social group. In the former, all three of the previously mentioned characteristics are seen, whereas in the latter, typically only the third characteristic is required for groups to be considered cooperative breeders. The types of care given to young by alloparents is remarkably diverse and includes patterns classified as both depreciable parental care (defined by Clutton-Brock 1991 as those patterns that change as a function of the number of offspring that are cared for; e.g., provisioning with food) and nondepreciable ones (those patterns that do not vary with the number of offspring that are cared for; e.g., burrow defense).
Cooperative breeding has received considerable attention from biologists, especially subsequent to the publication of Hamilton's landmark paper on the evolution of sociality (Hamilton 1964).
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- Cooperative Breeding in Mammals , pp. 1 - 10Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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