Article du Bulletin
Life history consequences of social complexity: a comparative study of ground-dwelling sciurids. [Conséquences pour l'histoire de vie de la complexité sociale : étude comparative des sciuridés terrestres.
Blumstein D.T. & K. B. Armitage · 1998 · Behav Ecol., 9 (1) : 8-19.
Votre navigateur n’affiche pas l’aperçu PDF. Ouvrir le PDF →
Résumé
We examined life-history consequences of increased social complexity in ground-dwelling scuirids rodents. We derived a continuous metric of social complexity from demographic data. Social complexity increased with the number of age-sex "roles" that interacted in a social group. Data were analyzed by computing phylogenetically independant contrasts and by using phylogenetic autocorrelation to estimate and then remove the maximum amount of variation in life-history variables that could be attributed to phylogenetic similarity. Analyses that incorporates estimates of phylogeny generated consistent results. As social complexity increased, a smaller proportion of adult females bred, there was a greater time to first reproduction, litter size decreased, and there was greater first-year offspring survival. Social complexity influenced neither gestation nor lactation time. Thus, social complexity has costs in terms of a reduction in the annual per-capita number of offspring produced but benefits in terms of enhanced offspring survival.
