Published December 12, 2020 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Habitat fragmentation shapes natal dispersal and sociality in an Afrotropical cooperative breeder

  • 1. Ghent University
  • 2. University of Groningen
  • 3. University of Salzburg
  • 4. National Museums of Kenya
  • 5. University of Antwerp

Description

It remains poorly understood how effects of anthropogenic activity, such as large-scale habitat fragmentation, impact sociality in animals. In cooperatively breeding species, groups are mostly formed through delayed offspring dispersal, and habitat fragmentation can affect this process in two opposite directions. Increased habitat isolation may increase dispersal costs, promoting delayed dispersal. Alternatively, reduced patch size and quality may decrease benefits of philopatry, promoting dispersal. Here, we test both predictions in a cooperatively breeding bird (placid greenbul, Phyllastrephus placidus) from an Afrotropical cloud forest archipelago. Males born in fragmented forest dispersed about one year earlier than those born in continuous forest. Contrary to females, males also started to reproduce earlier and mostly settled within their natal patch. Females only rarely delayed their dispersal for more than one year, both in fragmented and continuous forests. Our results suggest that early male dispersal and reproduction is jointly driven by a decrease in the value of the natal territory and an increase in local breeding opportunities in fragmented forest. While plasticity in dispersal strategies of cooperative breeders in response to anthropogenic change is believed to optimize reproduction-survival trade-offs, to what extent it shapes the ability of species to respond to rapid environmental change remains to be studied.

Notes

At every resighting occasion (i.e. a breeding season, columns X2007 to X2019)

- 0 is when a bird was not yet born or not resigted

- 1 is when an individual was resighted as philopatric subordinate (exept first occurence: fledging year)

- 2 is when an individual was resighted as non-natal subordinate

- 3 is when an individual was resighted as breeder

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