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Emergent social structure is typically not associated with survival in a facultatively social mammal

Conner S. Philson, Daniel T. Blumstein

2023Biology Letters15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

For social animals, group social structure has important consequences for disease and information spread. While prior studies showed individual connectedness within a group has fitness consequences, less is known about the fitness consequences of group social structure for the individuals who comprise the group. Using a long-term dataset on a wild population of facultatively social yellow-bellied marmots ( Marmota flaviventer ), we showed social structure had largely no relationship with survival, suggesting consequences of individual social phenotypes may not scale to the group social phenotype. An observed relationship for winter survival suggests a potentially contrasting direction of selection between the group and previous research on the individual level; less social individuals, but individuals in more social groups experience greater winter survival. This work provides valuable insights into evolutionary implications across social phenotypic scales.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySocial connectednessSocial groupInclusive fitnessSocial evolutionPopulationGroup selectionEcologySelection (genetic algorithm)DemographyEvolutionary biologySocial psychologyPsychologySociologyArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceAnimal Behavior and ReproductionEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationPrimate Behavior and Ecology
Emergent social structure is typically not associated with survival in a facultatively social mammal | Litcius