In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While parents are selected to adapt the amount of care according to their offspring's needs, offspring might be selected to demand more care than optimal for parents. Recent studies on birds have shown that the social network structure of offspring affects the amount of care and thus the fitness of families. Such a network structure of repeated interactions is probably influenced by within-brood relatedness. We experimentally manipulated the group composition in a brood-caring spider to test how the presence of unrelated spiderlings affects the dynamics between female and brood as well as within broods. Broods consisting of siblings grew better and...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
Natal dispersal is a successful tactic under a range of conditions in spite of significant costs. Ha...
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 ...
In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While ...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
Conflict over resources is a fundamental component of family life. Family conflicts are predicted to...
Several recent hypotheses suggest that parental care can influence the extent of phenotypic variatio...
Parental care is highly variable, reflecting that parents make flexible decisions in response to var...
Inbreeding mating systems are uncommon because of inbreeding depression. Mating among close relative...
Parenting strategies can be flexible within a species and may have varying fitness effects. Understa...
Animal societies vary in the number of breeders per group, which affects many socially and ecologica...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
Natal dispersal is a successful tactic under a range of conditions in spite of significant costs. Ha...
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 ...
In brood-caring species, family members are faced with a conflict over resource distribution. While ...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...
Conflict over resources is a fundamental component of family life. Family conflicts are predicted to...
Several recent hypotheses suggest that parental care can influence the extent of phenotypic variatio...
Parental care is highly variable, reflecting that parents make flexible decisions in response to var...
Inbreeding mating systems are uncommon because of inbreeding depression. Mating among close relative...
Parenting strategies can be flexible within a species and may have varying fitness effects. Understa...
Animal societies vary in the number of breeders per group, which affects many socially and ecologica...
Dispersal is important for exploitation of new habitat and for outbreeding. A precondition for socia...
Natal dispersal is a successful tactic under a range of conditions in spite of significant costs. Ha...
The transition to cooperative breeding may alter maternal investment strategies depending on density...