Interacting with relatives provides opportunities for fitness benefits via kin-selected cooperation, but also creates potential costs through kin competition and inbreeding. Therefore, a mechanism for the discrimination of kin from non-kin is likely to be critical for individuals of many social species to maximize their inclusive fitness. Evidence suggests that genetic cues to kinship are rare and that learned or environmental cues offer a more parsimonious explanation for kin recognition in most contexts. This is particularly true among cooperatively breeding birds, where recognition of familiar individuals is usually regarded as the most plausible mechanism for kin discrimination. In this article, we first review the evidence that familia...
Kin recognition is a critical element to kin cooperation, and in vertebrates, it is primarily based ...
The discovery that many animals are promiscuous has challenged the importance of Hamilton’s Rule bec...
Most cooperative breeders live in discrete family groups, but in a minority, breeding populations co...
Interacting with relatives provides opportunities for fitness benefits via kin-selected cooperation,...
Interacting with relatives provides opportunities for fitness benefits via kin-selected cooperation,...
Cooperative behaviour resulting from kin selection is widespread among animals and the ability to re...
Kin recognition is a critical element to kin cooperation, and in vertebrates, it is primarily based ...
Cooperative behaviour resulting from kin selection is widespread among animals and the ability to re...
In cooperative breeding systems driven by kin selection, effective kin-recognition cues are importan...
Theory predicts that individuals behave altruistically towards their relatives. Hence, some form of ...
In animal societies, characteristic demographic and dispersal patterns may lead to genetic structuri...
Most cooperative breeders live in discrete family groups, but in a minority, breeding populations co...
Kin selection is regarded as a key process in the evolution of avian cooperative breeding, and kinsh...
In animal societies, characteristic demographic and dispersal patterns may lead to genetic structuri...
Kin recognition is a critical element to kin cooperation, and in vertebrates, it is primarily based ...
The discovery that many animals are promiscuous has challenged the importance of Hamilton’s Rule bec...
Most cooperative breeders live in discrete family groups, but in a minority, breeding populations co...
Interacting with relatives provides opportunities for fitness benefits via kin-selected cooperation,...
Interacting with relatives provides opportunities for fitness benefits via kin-selected cooperation,...
Cooperative behaviour resulting from kin selection is widespread among animals and the ability to re...
Kin recognition is a critical element to kin cooperation, and in vertebrates, it is primarily based ...
Cooperative behaviour resulting from kin selection is widespread among animals and the ability to re...
In cooperative breeding systems driven by kin selection, effective kin-recognition cues are importan...
Theory predicts that individuals behave altruistically towards their relatives. Hence, some form of ...
In animal societies, characteristic demographic and dispersal patterns may lead to genetic structuri...
Most cooperative breeders live in discrete family groups, but in a minority, breeding populations co...
Kin selection is regarded as a key process in the evolution of avian cooperative breeding, and kinsh...
In animal societies, characteristic demographic and dispersal patterns may lead to genetic structuri...
Kin recognition is a critical element to kin cooperation, and in vertebrates, it is primarily based ...
The discovery that many animals are promiscuous has challenged the importance of Hamilton’s Rule bec...
Most cooperative breeders live in discrete family groups, but in a minority, breeding populations co...