Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Splendid Fairy-wrens: demonstrating the importance of longevity
- 2 Green Woodhoopoes: life history traits and sociality
- 3 Red-cockaded Woodpeckers: a ‘primitive’ cooperative breeder
- 4 Arabian Babblers: the quest for social status in a cooperative breeder
- 5 Hoatzins: cooperative breeding in a folivorous neotropical bird
- 6 Campylorhynchus wrens: the ecology of delayed dispersal and cooperation in the Venezuelan savanna
- 7 Pinyon Jays: making the best of a bad situation by helping
- 8 Florida Scrub Jays: a synopsis after 18 years of study
- 9 Mexican Jays: uncooperative breeding
- 10 Galápagos mockingbirds: territorial cooperative breeding in a climatically variable environment
- 11 Groove-billed Anis: joint-nesting in a tropical cuckoo
- 12 Galápagos and Harris' Hawks: divergent causes of sociality in two raptors
- 13 Pukeko: different approaches and some different answers
- 14 Acorn Woodpeckers: group-living and food storage under contrasting ecological conditions
- 15 Dunnocks: cooperation and conflict among males and females in a variable mating system
- 16 White-fronted Bee-eaters: helping in a colonially nesting species
- 17 Pied Kingfishers: ecological causes and reproductive consequences of cooperative breeding
- 18 Noisy Miners: variations on the theme of communality
- Summary
- Index
6 - Campylorhynchus wrens: the ecology of delayed dispersal and cooperation in the Venezuelan savanna
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Splendid Fairy-wrens: demonstrating the importance of longevity
- 2 Green Woodhoopoes: life history traits and sociality
- 3 Red-cockaded Woodpeckers: a ‘primitive’ cooperative breeder
- 4 Arabian Babblers: the quest for social status in a cooperative breeder
- 5 Hoatzins: cooperative breeding in a folivorous neotropical bird
- 6 Campylorhynchus wrens: the ecology of delayed dispersal and cooperation in the Venezuelan savanna
- 7 Pinyon Jays: making the best of a bad situation by helping
- 8 Florida Scrub Jays: a synopsis after 18 years of study
- 9 Mexican Jays: uncooperative breeding
- 10 Galápagos mockingbirds: territorial cooperative breeding in a climatically variable environment
- 11 Groove-billed Anis: joint-nesting in a tropical cuckoo
- 12 Galápagos and Harris' Hawks: divergent causes of sociality in two raptors
- 13 Pukeko: different approaches and some different answers
- 14 Acorn Woodpeckers: group-living and food storage under contrasting ecological conditions
- 15 Dunnocks: cooperation and conflict among males and females in a variable mating system
- 16 White-fronted Bee-eaters: helping in a colonially nesting species
- 17 Pied Kingfishers: ecological causes and reproductive consequences of cooperative breeding
- 18 Noisy Miners: variations on the theme of communality
- Summary
- Index
Summary
Social groups of birds and mammals are normally built by delayed dispersal of young. For many species of cooperative breeders, delayed dispersal is associated with delayed reproduction, creating a non-reproductive class embedded in a family structure. When these individuals collaborate in the breeding efforts of others during their tenure as non-reproductive adults, they pose an apparent dilemma for biologists: why should they help to rear others' young instead of dispersing to attempt at least to rear their own (Brown 1983,1987)? This paper reviews a system of cooperative breeding in which few adults produce offspring of their own and in which helping is so effective in improving the reproductive success of breeders that remaining on the natal territory to aid in rearing siblings is an unusually productive alternative method of gene replication compared to dispersing to attempt breeding.
Stripe-backed Wrens (Troglodytidae: Campylorhynchus nuchalis) live in family groups in the savannas of Colombia and Venezuela, where they often co-occur with a congener C. griseus, the Bicolored Wren. A third species, the Fasciated Wren (C. fasciatus) lives in the semiarid scrub and valley woodlands of the coasts of Ecuador and Peru. These three species normally live in groups with (apparently) non-reproductive helpers that remain on their natal territories past physiological maturity. Other species in this genus are known to be cooperative breeders (Selander 1964), including C. turdinus in the Amazon basin (R. H. Wiley, unpublished results) and C. rufinucha in Central America (F. Joyce, personal communication).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Cooperative Breeding in BirdsLong Term Studies of Ecology and Behaviour, pp. 157 - 196Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1990
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