Social animals vary in how reproduction is divided among group members, ranging from monopolization by a dominant pair (high skew) to equal sharing by cobreeders (low skew). Despite many theoretical models, the ecological and life-history factors that generate this variation are still debated. Here I analyze data from 83 species of cooperatively breeding birds, finding that kinship within the breeding group is a powerful predictor of reproductive sharing across species. Societies composed of nuclear families have significantly higher skew than those that contain unrelated members, a pattern that holds for both multimale and multifemale groups. Within-species studies confirm this, showing that unrelated subordinates of both sexes are more li...
Socially monogamous female birds routinely mate with males outside the pair bond. Three alternative ...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Understanding cooperative breeding requires an appreciation of the direct and indirect reproductive ...
Understanding how reproduction is partitioned between group members is essential in explaining the a...
In cooperative breeders the tension between the opposing forces of kin-selection and kin-competition...
In cooperatively breeding species, groups of three or more individuals cooperate in raising young. ...
Intra-group relatedness does not necessarily imply kin selection, a leading explanation for social e...
In socially monogamous species, males that risk cuckoldry more than others might gain inclusive fitn...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Cooperative breeding, in which more than a pair of conspecifics cooperate to raise young at a single...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Socially monogamous female birds routinely mate with males outside the pair bond. Three alternative ...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Understanding cooperative breeding requires an appreciation of the direct and indirect reproductive ...
Understanding how reproduction is partitioned between group members is essential in explaining the a...
In cooperative breeders the tension between the opposing forces of kin-selection and kin-competition...
In cooperatively breeding species, groups of three or more individuals cooperate in raising young. ...
Intra-group relatedness does not necessarily imply kin selection, a leading explanation for social e...
In socially monogamous species, males that risk cuckoldry more than others might gain inclusive fitn...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Cooperative breeding, in which more than a pair of conspecifics cooperate to raise young at a single...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Socially monogamous female birds routinely mate with males outside the pair bond. Three alternative ...
The evolution of helping behaviour in species that breed cooperatively in family groups is typically...
Understanding cooperative breeding requires an appreciation of the direct and indirect reproductive ...