No evidence for adaptive sex ratio variation in the cooperatively breeding meerkat, Suricata suricatta
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In: Animal Behaviour, Vol. 85, No. 3, 03.2013, p. 645-653.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - No evidence for adaptive sex ratio variation in the cooperatively breeding meerkat, Suricata suricatta
AU - MacLeod, K. J.
AU - Clutton-Brock, T. H.
PY - 2013/3
Y1 - 2013/3
N2 - Where a maternal trait influences the fitness of sons or daughters, mothers would be expected to bias the sex ratio towards the sex whose fitness they are more able to increment. In many polygynous species, maternal characteristics affect the fitness of sons more than that of daughters, but, in meerkats, variance in female reproductive success exceeds variance in male reproductive success and maternal rank affects the success of daughters more than sons. Dominant females would therefore be expected to produce an excess of daughters, a reversal of the hypothesis' usual predictions. In a long-term data set, despite a strong effect of maternal rank on daughters' success, we found no indication that dominant females produce female-biased litters. Offspring sex ratios did not deviate significantly from equality, and were also unaffected by maternal mass, age or number of previous litters produced in the same season. We suggest that potential advantages to both mother and offspring of producing and developing in mixed litters may result in the adaptive maintenance of an equal offspring sex ratio.
AB - Where a maternal trait influences the fitness of sons or daughters, mothers would be expected to bias the sex ratio towards the sex whose fitness they are more able to increment. In many polygynous species, maternal characteristics affect the fitness of sons more than that of daughters, but, in meerkats, variance in female reproductive success exceeds variance in male reproductive success and maternal rank affects the success of daughters more than sons. Dominant females would therefore be expected to produce an excess of daughters, a reversal of the hypothesis' usual predictions. In a long-term data set, despite a strong effect of maternal rank on daughters' success, we found no indication that dominant females produce female-biased litters. Offspring sex ratios did not deviate significantly from equality, and were also unaffected by maternal mass, age or number of previous litters produced in the same season. We suggest that potential advantages to both mother and offspring of producing and developing in mixed litters may result in the adaptive maintenance of an equal offspring sex ratio.
KW - maternal dominance
KW - meerkat
KW - offspring sex ratio variation
KW - Suricata suricatta
U2 - 10.1016/j.anbehav.2012.12.028
DO - 10.1016/j.anbehav.2012.12.028
M3 - Article
VL - 85
SP - 645
EP - 653
JO - Animal Behaviour
JF - Animal Behaviour
SN - 0003-3472
IS - 3
ER -