Environmental quality mediates the ecological dominance of cooperatively breeding birds

Author:

Lin Yu‐Heng1ORCID,Chen Ying‐Yu1,Rubenstein Dustin R.23ORCID,Liu Ming4ORCID,Liu Mark1,Shen Sheng‐Feng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biodiversity Research Center Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

2. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology Columbia University New York City New York USA

3. Center for Integrative Animal Behavior Columbia University New York City New York USA

4. Department of Biology University of Oxford Oxford UK

Abstract

AbstractAlthough social species as diverse as humans and ants are among the most abundant organisms on Earth, animals cooperate and form groups for many reasons. How these different reasons for grouping affect a species' ecological dominance remains unknown. Here we use a theoretical model to demonstrate that the different fitness benefits that animals receive by forming groups depend on the quality of their environment, which in turn impacts their ecological dominance and resilience to global change. We then test the model's key predictions using phylogenetic comparative analysis of >6500 bird species. As predicted, we find that cooperative breeders occurring in harsh and fluctuating environments have larger ranges and greater abundances than non‐cooperative breeders, but cooperative breeders occurring in benign and stable environments do not. Using our model, we further show that social species living in harsh and fluctuating environments will be less vulnerable to climate change than non‐social species.

Funder

Academia Sinica

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference69 articles.

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3. Human influence on joint changes in temperature, rainfall and continental aridity

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