The 'benefits of philopatry' hypothesis states that helpers in cooperatively breeding species derive higher benefits from remaining home, instead of dispersing and attempting to breed independently. We tested experimentally whether dispersal options influence dispersal propensity in the cooperatively breeding Lake Tanganyika cichlids Neolamprologus pulcher and N. savoryi. Cooperative groups of these fishes breed in densely packed colonies, surrounded by unoccupied, but apparently suitable breeding habitat. Breeding inside colonies and living in groups seems to benefit individuals, for example by early detection and deterrence of predators. We show that despite a slight preference of both species for habitat with a higher stone cover, 40% of...
In cooperatively breeding animals, individuals other than breeders assist in raising young. While it...
BackgroundSex-biased dispersal is a common and widespread phenomenon that can fundamentally shape th...
Abstract Unlike eusocial systems, which are characterized by reproductive division of labour, cooper...
The 'benefits of philopatry' hypothesis states that helpers in cooperatively breeding species derive...
Abstract The ‘benefits of philopatry ’ hypothesis states that helpers in cooperatively breeding spec...
Environmental conditions are thought to be responsible for the extent and benefits of cooperative br...
When and where to disperse is a major life history decision with crucial fitness consequences. Befor...
In cooperative breeders, between-group dispersal of helpers is expected to occur if it increases the...
Co-operative breeding in vertebrates may emerge due to subordinates delaying dispersal when free bre...
Neolamprologus pulcher is a cooperatively breeding cichlid fish, in which helpers stay in their nata...
In cooperative breeders, sexually mature subordinates can either queue for chances to inherit the br...
The conundrum of why subordinate individuals assist dominants at the expense of their own direct rep...
Many anti-predator benefits of group living are predicted to scale with prey density. Nevertheless, ...
In cooperatively breeding animals, individuals other than breeders assist in raising young. While it...
BackgroundSex-biased dispersal is a common and widespread phenomenon that can fundamentally shape th...
Abstract Unlike eusocial systems, which are characterized by reproductive division of labour, cooper...
The 'benefits of philopatry' hypothesis states that helpers in cooperatively breeding species derive...
Abstract The ‘benefits of philopatry ’ hypothesis states that helpers in cooperatively breeding spec...
Environmental conditions are thought to be responsible for the extent and benefits of cooperative br...
When and where to disperse is a major life history decision with crucial fitness consequences. Befor...
In cooperative breeders, between-group dispersal of helpers is expected to occur if it increases the...
Co-operative breeding in vertebrates may emerge due to subordinates delaying dispersal when free bre...
Neolamprologus pulcher is a cooperatively breeding cichlid fish, in which helpers stay in their nata...
In cooperative breeders, sexually mature subordinates can either queue for chances to inherit the br...
The conundrum of why subordinate individuals assist dominants at the expense of their own direct rep...
Many anti-predator benefits of group living are predicted to scale with prey density. Nevertheless, ...
In cooperatively breeding animals, individuals other than breeders assist in raising young. While it...
BackgroundSex-biased dispersal is a common and widespread phenomenon that can fundamentally shape th...
Abstract Unlike eusocial systems, which are characterized by reproductive division of labour, cooper...