The development of individual differences in cooperative behaviour: maternal glucocorticoid hormones alter helping behaviour of offspring in wild meerkats

2019 | journal article

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​The development of individual differences in cooperative behaviour: maternal glucocorticoid hormones alter helping behaviour of offspring in wild meerkats​
Dantzer, B.; Dubuc, C.; Goncalves, I. B.; Cram, D. L.; Bennett, N. C.; Ganswindt, A. & Heistermann, M. et al.​ (2019) 
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences374(1770) pp. 20180117​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2018.0117 

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Authors
Dantzer, Ben; Dubuc, Constance; Goncalves, Ines Braga; Cram, Dominic L.; Bennett, Nigel C.; Ganswindt, Andre; Heistermann, Michael; Duncan, Chris; Gaynor, David; Clutton-Brock, Tim H.
Abstract
The phenotype of parents can have long-lasting effects on the development of offspring as well as on their behaviour, physiology and morphology as adults. In some cases, these changes may increase offspring fitness but, in others, they can elevate parental fitness at a cost to the fitness of their offspring. We show that in Kalahari meerkats ( Suricata suricatta ), the circulating glucocorticoid (GC) hormones of pregnant females affect the growth and cooperative behaviour of their offspring. We performed a 3-year experiment in wild meerkats to test the hypothesis that GC-mediated maternal effects reduce the potential for offspring to reproduce directly and therefore cause them to exhibit more cooperative behaviour. Daughters (but not sons) born to mothers treated with cortisol during pregnancy grew more slowly early in life and exhibited significantly more of two types of cooperative behaviour (pup rearing and feeding) once they were adults compared to offspring from control mothers. They also had lower measures of GCs as they aged, which could explain the observed increases in cooperative behaviour. Because early life growth is a crucial determinant of fitness in female meerkats, our results indicate that GC-mediated maternal effects may reduce the fitness of offspring, but may elevate parental fitness as a consequence of increasing the cooperative behaviour of their daughters. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Developing differences: early-life effects and evolutionary medicine’.
Issue Date
2019
Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 
Organization
Deutsches Primatenzentrum 
ISSN
0962-8436
eISSN
1471-2970
Language
English
Sponsor
European Research Council
National Environment Research Council

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