The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density of breeders, extent of reproductive skew and allo-maternal care. Change in optimal investment from solitary to cooperative breeding can be investigated by comparing social species with non-social congeners. We tested two hypotheses in a mainly semelparous system: that social, cooperative breeders, compared to subsocial, solitarily breeding congeners, 1) lay fewer and larger eggs because larger offspring compete better for limited resources and become reproducers; 2) induce egg size variation within clutches as a bet-hedging strategy to ensure that some offspring become reproducers. Within two spider genera, Anelosimus and Stegodyphus, we com...
Background: Socially cued anticipatory plasticity (SCAP) has been proposed as a widespread mechanism...
Reproduction is costly and since males possess a finite energetic budget, resource allocation to one...
Background Life history theory predicts that mothers should adjust reproductive investment depending...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While ...
Reproductive partitioning is a key component of social organization in groups of cooperative organis...
In species where females gain a nutritious nuptial gift during mating, the balance between benefits ...
Inbreeding mating systems are uncommon because of inbreeding depression. Mating among close relative...
Few studies investigated whether rapid range expansion is associated with an individual's short-term...
In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While ...
The evolution of cooperation requires benefits of group living to exceed costs. Hence, some componen...
Sperm competition drives traits that enhance fertilization success. The amount of sperm transferred ...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
Background: Socially cued anticipatory plasticity (SCAP) has been proposed as a widespread mechanism...
Reproduction is costly and since males possess a finite energetic budget, resource allocation to one...
Background Life history theory predicts that mothers should adjust reproductive investment depending...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While ...
Reproductive partitioning is a key component of social organization in groups of cooperative organis...
In species where females gain a nutritious nuptial gift during mating, the balance between benefits ...
Inbreeding mating systems are uncommon because of inbreeding depression. Mating among close relative...
Few studies investigated whether rapid range expansion is associated with an individual's short-term...
In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While ...
The evolution of cooperation requires benefits of group living to exceed costs. Hence, some componen...
Sperm competition drives traits that enhance fertilization success. The amount of sperm transferred ...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
Background: Socially cued anticipatory plasticity (SCAP) has been proposed as a widespread mechanism...
Reproduction is costly and since males possess a finite energetic budget, resource allocation to one...
Background Life history theory predicts that mothers should adjust reproductive investment depending...