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Projekt Druckansicht

Influence of ecology and social interactions on the early evolution of family life.

Antragstellerin Professorin Dr. Susanne Foitzik, seit 2/2016
Fachliche Zuordnung Evolution, Anthropologie
Biologie des Verhaltens und der Sinne
Ökologie und Biodiversität der Tiere und Ökosysteme, Organismische Interaktionen
Förderung Förderung von 2013 bis 2017
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 235565503
 
Erstellungsjahr 2017

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

A long-lasting problem in evolutionary biology is to understand why some animals live in families, whereas others prefer solitary life. In this context, a major issue concerns which factors promote the emergence and maintenance of family interactions. In this project, we aimed at addressing this question by testing how resource availability and sibling interactions shape the early evolution of family life in the European earwig "Forficula auricularia". The first part of the project specifically focused on the short- and long-term effects of low resource availability on family interactions. Our results produced four published manuscripts, in which we showed that (1) food restrictions entails a competition between mothers and offspring that can reduce offspring survival, (2) parental condition affects the behaviors that juveniles express toward their siblings and parents during family interactions, (3) variation in resource availability have limited effects on the expression of maternal care under natural conditions and (4) inter-individual variation in body conditions (driven by resource availability) shapes the outcome of investment trade-off between reproduction and care in earwig females, The second part of this project explored putative forms of cooperative behaviors between siblings and investigated to what extend the benefits of sibling cooperation could promote the early evolution of family life. This second part lead to three published manuscripts demonstrating that (5) juveniles do not only compete but may also exchange food during family life, (6) this food exchange may compensate for low levels of maternal care and that (7) this food exchange stops when offspring reach adulthood. In addition to these two parts, we were also interested in taking broader perspectives on the topic of this project and produced 3 additional published manuscripts. Specifically, we (8) wrote a review to discuss the important controversy between kin selection and multilevel selection in the evolution of social life in nature, (9) investigated the short and long-term effects of maternal deprivation in flexible social systems and finally (10) the role of maternal care on the chemical signatures of offspring and the expression of nepotistic behaviors. Overall, our projects tested predictions of a novel and major hypothesis stating that good rather than harsh ecological conditions favor switch from solitary to family life, and more generally provided novel and key insights on the importance of environmental quality and within-group interactions on the early evolution of family life.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

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