The evolution of helping, in which some individuals forfeit their own reproduction and help others to reproduce, is a central problem in evolutionary biology. Recently proposed insurance-based mechanisms rely on a pre-existing life history with a long period of offspring dependency relative to the short life expectancies of adult carers1, 2, 3, 4: a lone mother's offspring are doomed if she dies young, whereas after a helper dies, other group members can finish rearing the offspring5, 6. A critical question, however, is how this life history could evolve in ancestral non-social populations, as offspring survival would then depend on a single, short-lived carer. Here, we resolve this paradox by focusing on the extended parental care inherent...
A lack of parental care is generally assumed to entail substantial fitness costs for offspring that ...
International audience1. Kin competition often reduces-and sometimes entirely negates-the benefits o...
sib-social care, subsociality We discuss the evolutionary origin and elaboration of sociality using ...
The origin and maintenance of eusociality is a central problem in evolutionary biology1, 2. Eusocial...
Recent explanations for the evolution of eusociality, focusing more on costs and benefits than relat...
Helpers in primitively eusocial and cooperatively breeding animal societies forfeit their own reprod...
Most nonsocial wasps and bees are mass provisioners (MP), sealing each egg into its own cell contain...
Eusociality is a fundamental phenomenon in many insects, yet its evolution and underlying mechanisms...
In primitively eusocial and cooperatively breeding societies, there is substantial individual variat...
The sterile worker castes found in the colonies of social insects are often cited as the archetypal ...
Because it increases relatedness between interacting individuals, population viscosity has been prop...
Patterns of parental care are strikingly diverse in nature, and parental care is thought to have evo...
Animals that co-operate with non-relatives represent a challenge to inclusive fitness theory, unless...
Knowledge of the selective pressures favouring parental care can inform our understanding of the evo...
Many animals live in societies of varying degrees of organization. Some individuals in these societi...
A lack of parental care is generally assumed to entail substantial fitness costs for offspring that ...
International audience1. Kin competition often reduces-and sometimes entirely negates-the benefits o...
sib-social care, subsociality We discuss the evolutionary origin and elaboration of sociality using ...
The origin and maintenance of eusociality is a central problem in evolutionary biology1, 2. Eusocial...
Recent explanations for the evolution of eusociality, focusing more on costs and benefits than relat...
Helpers in primitively eusocial and cooperatively breeding animal societies forfeit their own reprod...
Most nonsocial wasps and bees are mass provisioners (MP), sealing each egg into its own cell contain...
Eusociality is a fundamental phenomenon in many insects, yet its evolution and underlying mechanisms...
In primitively eusocial and cooperatively breeding societies, there is substantial individual variat...
The sterile worker castes found in the colonies of social insects are often cited as the archetypal ...
Because it increases relatedness between interacting individuals, population viscosity has been prop...
Patterns of parental care are strikingly diverse in nature, and parental care is thought to have evo...
Animals that co-operate with non-relatives represent a challenge to inclusive fitness theory, unless...
Knowledge of the selective pressures favouring parental care can inform our understanding of the evo...
Many animals live in societies of varying degrees of organization. Some individuals in these societi...
A lack of parental care is generally assumed to entail substantial fitness costs for offspring that ...
International audience1. Kin competition often reduces-and sometimes entirely negates-the benefits o...
sib-social care, subsociality We discuss the evolutionary origin and elaboration of sociality using ...