Opposite-sex associations are linked with annual fitness, but sociality is stable over lifetime

Author:

Dunning Jamie1ORCID,Burke Terry2,Hoi Hang Chan Alex134,Ying Janet Chik Heung56,Evans Tim7,Schroeder Julia1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College London , UK

2. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biosciences, The University of Sheffield , UK

3. Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behaviour, University of Konstanz , Germany

4. Max Plank Institute of Animal Behaviour , Germany

5. Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen , Netherlands

6. School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University , Australia

7. Center for Complexity Science, Imperial College London , UK

Abstract

AbstractAnimal sociality, an individual’s propensity to associate with others, has fitness consequences through mate choice, for example, directly, by increasing the pool of prospective partners, and indirectly through increased survival, and individuals benefit from both. Annually, fitness consequences are realized through increased mating success and subsequent fecundity. However, it remains unknown whether these consequences translate to lifetime fitness. Here, we quantified social associations and their link to fitness annually and over lifetime, using a multi-generational, genetic pedigree. We used social network analysis to calculate variables representing different aspects of an individual’s sociality. Sociality showed high within-individual repeatability. We found that birds with more opposite-sex associates had higher annual fitness than those with fewer, but this did not translate to lifetime fitness. Instead, for lifetime fitness, we found evidence for stabilizing selection on opposite-sex sociality, and sociality in general, suggesting that reported benefits are only short-lived in a wild population, and that selection favors an average sociality.

Funder

QMEE CDT

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

European Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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