Allonursing, the nursing of another female’s offspring, is assumed to impose a substantial energetic cost given the high cost of lactation to mothers. However, these costs have not been quantified. In cooperatively breeding mammals where helpers contribute to lactation, they might be expected to modify their behavior to mitigate these potential costs. Here, we show that overnight weight loss during lactation did not differ between allonurses and controls. However, meerkat helpers that allonursed do not gain weight over a reproductive bout as non-allonursing subordinate females did, suggesting that allonurses may incur some cost. Allonurses may mitigate the costs by increasing foraging effort during lactation. Allonurses do not, as ex...
Evolutionary explanations of cooperative breeding based on kin selection have predicted that the ind...
Studies of cooperatively breeding birds and mammals generally concentrate on the effects that helper...
When an animal has to meet increased demands on its working capacity, for example, for thermoregulat...
Species may become obligate cooperative breeders when parents are unable to raise their offspring un...
1. Cooperative behaviours by definition are those that provide some benefit to another individual. A...
When parents invest heavily in reproduction they commonly suffer significant energetic costs. Parent...
Allolactation, the nursing of another female’s offspring, occurs most commonly where several females...
Allonursing, the nursing of another female's offspring, is commonly assumed to have evolved through ...
This is the accepted manuscript. The final published version is available from Royal Society Publish...
The phenotype of parents can have long-lasting effects on the development of offspring as well as on...
In vertebrate societies where young are reared communally, nonbreeding helpers are usually closely r...
Publication history: Accepted - 27 October 2021; Published - 29 October 2021.The dams of gregarious ...
Cooperative-breeding studies tend to focus on a few alloparental behaviours in highly cooperative sp...
In mammals with biparental care of offspring, males and females may bear substantial energetic costs...
In group-living mammals, the eviction of subordinate females from breeding groups by dominants may s...
Evolutionary explanations of cooperative breeding based on kin selection have predicted that the ind...
Studies of cooperatively breeding birds and mammals generally concentrate on the effects that helper...
When an animal has to meet increased demands on its working capacity, for example, for thermoregulat...
Species may become obligate cooperative breeders when parents are unable to raise their offspring un...
1. Cooperative behaviours by definition are those that provide some benefit to another individual. A...
When parents invest heavily in reproduction they commonly suffer significant energetic costs. Parent...
Allolactation, the nursing of another female’s offspring, occurs most commonly where several females...
Allonursing, the nursing of another female's offspring, is commonly assumed to have evolved through ...
This is the accepted manuscript. The final published version is available from Royal Society Publish...
The phenotype of parents can have long-lasting effects on the development of offspring as well as on...
In vertebrate societies where young are reared communally, nonbreeding helpers are usually closely r...
Publication history: Accepted - 27 October 2021; Published - 29 October 2021.The dams of gregarious ...
Cooperative-breeding studies tend to focus on a few alloparental behaviours in highly cooperative sp...
In mammals with biparental care of offspring, males and females may bear substantial energetic costs...
In group-living mammals, the eviction of subordinate females from breeding groups by dominants may s...
Evolutionary explanations of cooperative breeding based on kin selection have predicted that the ind...
Studies of cooperatively breeding birds and mammals generally concentrate on the effects that helper...
When an animal has to meet increased demands on its working capacity, for example, for thermoregulat...