Arid
DOI10.1371/journal.pone.0040866
Direct Fitness Correlates and Thermal Consequences of Facultative Aggregation in a Desert Lizard
Rabosky, Alison R. Davis1,2,3,4; Corl, Ammon1,5; Liwanag, Heather E. M.1,6; Surget-Groba, Yann1,7; Sinervo, Barry1
通讯作者Rabosky, Alison R. Davis
来源期刊PLOS ONE
ISSN1932-6203
出版年2012
卷号7期号:7
英文摘要

Social aggregation is a common behavioral phenomenon thought to evolve through adaptive benefits to group living. Comparing fitness differences between aggregated and solitary individuals in nature - necessary to infer an evolutionary benefit to living in groups - has proven difficult because communally-living species tend to be obligately social and behaviorally complex. However, these differences and the mechanisms driving them are critical to understanding how solitary individuals transition to group living, as well as how and why nascent social systems change over time. Here we demonstrate that facultative aggregation in a reptile (the Desert Night Lizard, Xantusia vigilis) confers direct reproductive success and survival advantages and that thermal benefits of winter huddling disproportionately benefit small juveniles, which can favor delayed dispersal of offspring and the formation of kin groups. Using climate projection models, however, we estimate that future aggregation in night lizards could decline more than 50% due to warmer temperatures. Our results support the theory that transitions to group living arise from direct benefits to social individuals and offer a clear mechanism for the origin of kin groups through juvenile philopatry. The temperature dependence of aggregation in this and other taxa suggests that environmental variation may be a powerful but underappreciated force in the rapid transition between social and solitary behavior.


类型Article
语种英语
国家USA ; Sweden ; Peoples R China
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000306687700019
WOS关键词CLIMATE-CHANGE ; XANTUSIA-VIGILIS ; SOCIAL-BEHAVIOR ; LIFE-HISTORY ; EVOLUTION ; EUSOCIALITY ; DISPERSAL ; BENEFITS ; RELATEDNESS ; PHILOPATRY
WOS类目Multidisciplinary Sciences
WOS研究方向Science & Technology - Other Topics
来源机构University of California, Berkeley
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/174542
作者单位1.Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA;
2.Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Integrat Biol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA;
3.Univ Calif Berkeley, Museum Vertebrate Zool, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA;
4.Univ Michigan, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA;
5.Uppsala Univ, Dept Evolutionary Biol, Evolutionary Biol Ctr, Uppsala, Sweden;
6.Adelphi Univ, Dept Biol, Garden City, NY 11530 USA;
7.Xishuangbanna Trop Bot Garden, Ecol Evolut Grp, Mengla, Yunnan, Peoples R China
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Rabosky, Alison R. Davis,Corl, Ammon,Liwanag, Heather E. M.,et al. Direct Fitness Correlates and Thermal Consequences of Facultative Aggregation in a Desert Lizard[J]. University of California, Berkeley,2012,7(7).
APA Rabosky, Alison R. Davis,Corl, Ammon,Liwanag, Heather E. M.,Surget-Groba, Yann,&Sinervo, Barry.(2012).Direct Fitness Correlates and Thermal Consequences of Facultative Aggregation in a Desert Lizard.PLOS ONE,7(7).
MLA Rabosky, Alison R. Davis,et al."Direct Fitness Correlates and Thermal Consequences of Facultative Aggregation in a Desert Lizard".PLOS ONE 7.7(2012).
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