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Fine‐scale spatiotemporal patterns of genetic variation reflect budding dispersal coupled with strong natal philopatry in a cooperatively breeding mammal
Author(s) -
Nichols Hazel J.,
Jordan Neil R.,
Jamie Gabriel A.,
Cant Michael A.,
Hoffman Joseph I.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
molecular ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.619
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1365-294X
pISSN - 0962-1083
DOI - 10.1111/mec.12015
Subject(s) - philopatry , biology , biological dispersal , mammal , variation (astronomy) , scale (ratio) , evolutionary biology , ecology , demography , population , cartography , sociology , physics , astrophysics , geography
The relatedness structure of animal populations is thought to be a critically important factor underlying the evolution of mating systems and social behaviours. While previous work has shown that population structure is shaped by many biological processes, few studies have investigated how these factors vary over time. Consequently, we explored the fine‐scale spatiotemporal genetic structure of an intensively studied population of cooperatively breeding banded mongooses ( M ungos mungo ) over a 10‐year period. Overall population structure was strong (average F ST = 0.129) but groups with spatially overlapping territories were not more genetically similar to one another than noncontiguous groups. Instead, genetic differentiation was associated with historical group‐fission (budding) events, with new groups diverging from their parent groups over time. Within groups, relatedness was high within but not between the sexes, although the latter increased over time since group formation due to group founders being replaced by philopatric young. This trend was not mirrored by a decrease in average offspring heterozygosity over time, suggesting that close inbreeding may often be avoided, even when immigration into established groups is virtually absent and opportunities for extra‐group matings are rare. Fine‐scale spatiotemporal population structure could have important implications in social species, where relatedness between interacting individuals is a vital component in the evolution of patterns of inbreeding avoidance, reproductive skew and kin‐selected helping and harming.