An intergenerational androgenic mechanism of female intrasexual competition in the cooperatively breeding meerkat — Christine M. Drea (2021) | RDL Network
An intergenerational androgenic mechanism of female intrasexual competition in the cooperatively breeding meerkat
Nature Communications 12(1)
Article 2021 English
Authors
CD
Christine M. Drea
CD
Charli S. Davies
LG
Lydia K. Greene
Abstract
1 min read
Female intrasexual competition can be intense in cooperatively breeding species, with some dominant breeders (matriarchs) limiting reproduction in subordinates via aggression, eviction or infanticide. In males, such tendencies bidirectionally link to testosterone, but in females, there has been little systematic investigation of androgen-mediated behaviour within and across generations. In 22 clans of wild meerkats ( Suricata suricatta ), we show that matriarchs 1) express peak androgen concentrations during late gestation, 2) when displaying peak feeding competition, dominance behaviour, and evictions, and 3) relative to subordinates, produce offspring that are more aggressive in early development. Late-gestation antiandrogen treatment of matriarchs 4) specifically reduces dominance behaviour, is associated with infrequent evictions, decreases social centrality within the clan, 5) increases aggression in cohabiting subordinate dams, and 6) reduces offspring aggression. These effects implicate androgen-mediated aggression in the operation of female sexual selection, and intergenerational transmission of masculinised phenotypes in the evolution of meerkat cooperative breeding.
Christine M. Drea, Charli S. Davies, Lydia K. Greene, Jessica Mitchell, Dimitri V. Blondel, Caroline L. Shearer, Joseph T. Feldblum, Kristin Dimac-Stohl, Kendra Smyth, Tim Clutton-brock
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