Differences in cooperative behavior among Damaraland mole rats are consequences of an age-related polyethism

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Zottl, Markus
Vullioud, Philippe
Mendonça, Rute
Ticó, Miquel Torrents
Gaynor, David
Mitchell, Adam
Clutton-Brock, Tim H.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Abstract

In many cooperative breeders, the contributions of helpers to cooperative activities change with age, resulting in age-related polyethisms. In contrast, some studies of social mole rats (including naked mole rats, Heterocephalus glaber, and Damaraland mole rats, Fukomys damarensis) suggest that individual differences in cooperative behavior are the result of divergent developmental pathways, leading to discrete and permanent functional categories of helpers that resemble the caste systems found in eusocial insects. Here we show that, in Damaraland mole rats, individual contributions to cooperative behavior increase with age and are higher in fast-growing individuals. Individual contributions to different cooperative tasks are intercorrelated and repeatability of cooperative behavior is similar to that found in other cooperatively breeding vertebrates. Our data provide no evidence that nonreproductive individuals show divergent developmental pathways or specialize in particular tasks. Instead of representing a caste system, variation in the behavior of nonreproductive individuals in Damaraland mole rats closely resembles that found in other cooperatively breeding mammals and appears to be a consequence of age-related polyethism.

Description

Keywords

Caste, Cooperative breeding, Division of labor, Eusociality, Social mole rats, Damaraland mole-rat (Fukomys damarensis)

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Zöttl, M, Vullioud, P, Mendonça, R, Tico, MT, Gaynor, D, Mitchell, A & Clutton-Brock, TH 2016, 'Differences in cooperative behavior among Damaraland mole rats are consequences of an age-related polyethism', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 113, no. 37, pp. 10382-10387.