Fighting force and experience combine to determine contest success in a warlike mammal
2022 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.
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Fighting force and experience combine to determine contest success in a warlike mammal
Green, P. A.; Thompson, F. J. & Cant, M. A. (2022)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 119(25) art. e2119176119. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2119176119
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- Authors
- Green, P. A.; Thompson, Faye J.; Cant, Michael A.
- Abstract
- Conflicts between social groups or “intergroup contests” are proposed to play a major role in the evolution of cooperation and social organization in humans and some nonhuman animal societies. In humans, success in warfare and other collective conflicts depends on both fighting group size and the presence and actions of key individuals, such as leaders or talismanic warriors. Understanding the determinants of intergroup contest success in other warlike animals may help to reveal the role of these contests in social evolution. Using 19 y of data on intergroup encounters in a particularly violent social mammal, the banded mongoose ( Mungos mungo ), we show that two factors, the number of adult males and the age of the oldest male (the “senior” male), have the strongest impacts on the probability of group victory. The advantage conferred by senior males appears to stem from their fighting experience. However, the galvanizing effect of senior males declines as they grow old until, at very advanced ages, senior males become a liability rather than an asset and can be evicted. As in human conflict, strength in numbers and the experience of key individuals combine to determine intergroup contest success in this animal society. We discuss how selection arising from intergroup contests may explain a suite of features of individual life history and social organization, including male eviction, sex-assortative alloparental care, and adult sex ratio.
- Issue Date
- 2022
- Journal
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- ISSN
- 0027-8424
- eISSN
- 1091-6490
- Language
- English
- Sponsor
- Human Frontier Science Program 501100000854
UKRI | Natural Environment Research Council 501100000270