Guides and cheats: producer–scrounger dynamics in the human–honeyguide mutualism

Author:

Cram Dominic L.1ORCID,Lloyd-Jones David J.2ORCID,van der Wal Jessica E. M.2ORCID,Lund Jess1ORCID,Buanachique Iahaia O.3,Muamedi Musaji3,Nanguar Carvalho I.3,Ngovene Antonio4ORCID,Raveh Shirley5ORCID,Boner Winnie5ORCID,Spottiswoode Claire N.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire CB2 3EJ, UK

2. FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa

3. Mbamba village, Niassa Special Reserve, Mozambique

4. EO Wilson Biodiversity Laboratory, Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique

5. School of Biodiversity, One Health and Veterinary Medicine, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Graham Kerr Building, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK

Abstract

Foraging animals commonly choose whether to find new food (as ‘producers’) or scavenge from others (as ‘scroungers’), and this decision has ecological and evolutionary consequences. Understanding these tactic decisions is particularly vital for naturally occurring producer–scrounger systems of economic importance, because they determine the system's productivity and resilience. Here, we investigate how individuals' traits predict tactic decisions, and the consistency and pay-offs of these decisions, in the remarkable mutualism between humans ( Homo sapiens ) and greater honeyguides ( Indicator indicator ). Honeyguides can either guide people to bees’ nests and eat the resulting beeswax (producing), or scavenge beeswax (scrounging). Our results suggest that honeyguides flexibly switched tactics, and that guiding yielded greater access to the beeswax. Birds with longer tarsi scrounged more, perhaps because they are more competitive. The lightest females rarely guided, possibly to avoid aggression, or because genetic matrilines may affect female body mass and behaviour in this species. Overall, aspects of this producer–scrounger system probably increase the productivity and resilience of the associated human–honeyguide mutualism, because the pay-offs incentivize producing, and tactic-switching increases the pool of potential producers. Broadly, our findings suggest that even where tactic-switching is prevalent and producing yields greater pay-offs, certain phenotypes may be predisposed to one tactic.

Funder

British Ecological Society

European Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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