Skip to main content
Log in

Cooperative breeding by the Galápagos mockingbird, Nesomimus parvulus

  • Published:
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Summary

The costs and benefits of helping behavior were analyzed for 36 pairs of the Galápagos mockingbird, Nesomimus parvulus, and their associates. Helping at the nest is usually done by sons or males suspected to be offspring of the breeders. Costs and benefits to breeders were assessed by comparison of pairs with and without helpers, and costs and benefits to helpers were assessed by comparison of birds which help and those which establish themselves as novice breeders.

Helping behavior benefits breeders by increasing fledging success and by reducing the adult energy load in territory defense and feeding of nestlings. Breeders assisted by helpers may also benefit by decreased nest predation. Helpers enhance their inclusive fitness by helping, and gain directly by increasing their chances of securing a territory. Helpers do not appear to gain any fitness advantage from the experience of assisting, nor do they increase their survivorship by remaining on natal territory.

Ecological and demographic features such as saturated territories and low territory turn-over rates due to high adult survival may be primarily responsible for the evolution of the helping behavior, with kinselection reinforcing it. Associated features of this system are a male-biased population sex ratio, a greater energetic benefit to breeding males than to breeding females in having helpers, earlier dispersal and breeding by females than by males, and much more frequent helping by males than by females. These are interpreted as consequences of brothersister aggression that indirectly minimizes the chances of inbreeding.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Alexander RD (1974) The evolution of social behavior. Annu Rev Ecol Syst 5:325–383

    Google Scholar 

  • Black J (1974) Galápagos: archipielago de Colon. Imprenta Europa, Quito, Ecuador

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL (1970) Cooperative breeding and altruistic behavior in the Mexican jay, Aphelocoma ultramarina. Anim Behav 18:366–378

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL (1974) Alternate routes to sociality in jays — with a theory for the evolution of altruism and communal breeding. Am Zool 14:63–80

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL (1975) Evolution of behaviour. Norton, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL (1978a) Avian communal breeding systems. Annu Rev Ecol Syst 9:123–156

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL (1978b) Avian heirs of territory. Bio Science 28:750–752

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL (1980) Fitness in complex avian social systems. In: Markl H (ed) Evolution of social behavior: Hypotheses and empirical tests. Verlag Chemie, Weinheim, pp 115–128

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL, Balda RP (1977) The relationship of habitat quality to group size in Hall's babbler, Pomatostomus halli. Condor 79:312–320

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown JL, Brown ER (1981) Kin selection and individnal selection in babblers. In: Alexander RD, Tinkle DW (eds) Natural selection and social behavior. Chiron, Newton, pp 244–256

    Google Scholar 

  • Dow DD (1978) Breeding biology and development of the young of Manorina melanocaphala, a communally breeding honeyeater. Amu 78:207–227

    Google Scholar 

  • Emlen ST (1978) The evolution of cooperative breeding in birds. In: Krebs JR, Davies NB (eds) Behavioural ecology: an evolutionary approach. Sinauer, Sunderland, MA, pp 245–281

    Google Scholar 

  • Emlen ST (1981) Altruism, kinship, and reciprocation in the whitefronted bee eater. In: Alexander RD, Tinkle DW (eds) Natural selection and social behavior. Chiron, Newton, pp 217–230

    Google Scholar 

  • Fry CH 1972) The social organization of bee aeters (Meropidae) and cooperative breeding in hot climate birds. Ibis 114:1–14

    Google Scholar 

  • Gaston AJ (1978) The evolution of group teritorial behavior and cooperative breeding. Am Nat 112:101–110

    Google Scholar 

  • Grant PR, Boag PT (1980) Rainfall on the Galápagos and the demography of Darwin's Finches. Auk 97:227–244

    Google Scholar 

  • Grant PR, Grant N (1979) Breeding and feeding of the Galápagos mockingbird, Nesomimus parvulus. Auk 96:723–736

    Google Scholar 

  • Grant PR, Smith JNM, Grant BR, Abbott IJ, Abbott LK (1975) Finch numbers, owl predation and plant dispersal on Isla Daphne Major, Galápagos. Oceologia (Berl) 19:239–257

    Google Scholar 

  • Greenwood PJ (1980) Mating systems, philopatry and dispersal in birds and mammals. Anim Behav 28:1140–1162

    Google Scholar 

  • Greenwood PJ, Harvey PH, Perrins CM (1979) The role of dispersal in the Great tit: the causes, consequences and heritability of natal dispersal. J Anim Ecol 48:123–142

    Google Scholar 

  • Hailman JP (1960) Hostile dancing and fall territory of a colorbanded mockingbird. Condor 62:464–468

    Google Scholar 

  • Hamilton WD (1964) The genetical evolution of social behavior I and II. J Theor Biol 7:1–52

    Google Scholar 

  • King BR (1980) Social organization and behavior of the Greycrowned babbler, Pomatostomus temporalis. Emu 80:59–76

    Google Scholar 

  • Koenig WD, Pitelka FA (1981) Ecological factors and kin selection in the evolution of cooperative breeding in birds. In: Alexander RD, Tinkle DW (eds) Natural selection and social behavior. Chiron, Newton, pp 261–280

    Google Scholar 

  • Lack D (1968) Ecological adaptations for breeding in birds. Methuen, London

    Google Scholar 

  • Ligon JD, Ligon SH (1978) Communal breeding in green woodhoopoes as a case for reciprocity. Nature 276:496–498

    Google Scholar 

  • Ligon JD, Ligon SH (1979) The communal social system of the green woodhoopoe in Kenya. Living Bird 17:159–197

    Google Scholar 

  • Marchant S (1960) The breeding of some S.W. Ecuadorian birds. Ibis 102:349–381, 584–599

    Google Scholar 

  • Maynard Smith J, Ridpath MG (1972) Wife sharing in the Tasmanian native hen Tribonyx mortierii: a case of kin selection? Am Nat 106:447–452

    Google Scholar 

  • Orians GH, Orians CE, Orians KJ (1977) Helpers at the nest in some Argentine Blackbirds. In: Stonehouse B, Perrins CM (eds) Evolutionary ecology. Macmillan, London, pp 137–151

    Google Scholar 

  • Parry V (1973) The auxilliary social system and its effects on territory and breeding in Kookaburras. Emu 73:81–100

    Google Scholar 

  • Reyer H-U (1980) Flexible helper structure as an ecological adaptation in the Pied kingfisher. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 6:219–227

    Google Scholar 

  • Ricklefs RE (1975) The evolution of co-operative breeding in birds. Ibis 117:531–534

    Google Scholar 

  • Ridpath MG (1972) The Tasmanian native hen, Tribonyx mortierii II The individual, the group and the population. CSIRO Wildl Res 17:53–90

    Google Scholar 

  • Rowley I (1965) Life history of the Superb blue wren. Emu 64:251–297

    Google Scholar 

  • Rowley I (1978) Communal activities among white-winged choughs Corcorax melanorhamphus. Ibis 120:178

    Google Scholar 

  • Skutch AF (1961) Helpers among birds. Condor 63:198–226

    Google Scholar 

  • Stallcup JA, Woolfenden GE (1978) Family status and contribution to breeding by Florida scrub jays. Anim Behav 26:1144–1156

    Google Scholar 

  • Trivers RL (1972) Parental investment and sexual selection. In: Campbell B (ed) Sexual selection and the descent of man. Aldine, Chicago, pp 136–179

    Google Scholar 

  • Venables LSV (1940) Nesting behavior of the Galápapos Mockingbirds. Ibis 4:629–639

    Google Scholar 

  • West Eberhard M (1975) The evolution of social behavior by kin selection. Q Rev Biol 50:1–34

    Google Scholar 

  • Wiggins IL, Porter DM (1971) Flora of the Galápagos Islands. Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA

    Google Scholar 

  • Woolfenden GE (1975) Florida scrub jay helpers at the nest. Auk 92:1–15

    Google Scholar 

  • Woolfenden GE (1976) Co-operative breeding in American birds. Proc XVI Int Ornithol Congr, pp 674–684

  • Woolfenden GE (1981) Selfish behavior by Florida Scrub Jay helpers. In: Alexander RD, Tinkle DW (eds) Natural selection and social behavior. Chiron, Newton, pp 257–261

    Google Scholar 

  • Woolfenden GE, Fitzpatrick JW (1978) The inheritance of territory in group-breeding birds. BioScience 28:104–108

    Google Scholar 

  • Zahavi A (1974) Communal nesting by the Arabian babbler. Ibis 116:84–87

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Kinnaird, M.F., Grant, P.R. Cooperative breeding by the Galápagos mockingbird, Nesomimus parvulus . Behav Ecol Sociobiol 10, 65–73 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00296397

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00296397

Keywords

Navigation