This is a Preprint and has not been peer reviewed. The published version of this Preprint is available: https://doi.org/10.1086/720270. This is version 1 of this Preprint.
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Abstract
Crook published a landmark study on the social organization of weavers (or weaverbirds, family Ploceidae) that contributed to the emergence of sociobiology, behavioral ecology, and phylogenetic comparative methods. By comparing ecology, spatial distribution, and mating systems, Crook suggested that the spatial distribution of food resources and breeding habitats influence weaver aggregation, both during the non-breeding season (flocking vs solitary foraging) and breeding season (colonial vs solitary breeding), and the latter in turn, impacts mating systems and sexual selection. Although Crook’s study stimulated much follow-up research, his conclusions have not been scrutinized using phylogenetically controlled analyses. We revisited Crook’s hypotheses using modern phylogenetic comparative methods on an extended dataset of 107 weaver species. We showed that both diet and habitat type are associated with spatial distribution and the latter predicts mating system, consistent with Crook’s propositions. The best supported phylogenetic path model (PPA) also supported Crook’s arguments and uncovered a direct relationship between non-breeding distribution and mating system. Taken together, our phylogenetically corrected analyses confirm Crook’s conjectures on the roles of ecology in social organizations of weavers; however, our analyses also uncovered an association between non-breeding distributions and mating systems, which was not envisaged by Crook.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.32942/osf.io/vb9xn
Subjects
Animal Studies, Social and Behavioral Sciences
Keywords
coloniality, pair-bonding, parental care, sexual selection, sexual size dimorphism, social behavior
Dates
Published: 2022-02-20 11:42
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