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Presence of kin-biased social associations in a lizard with no parental care: the eastern water dragon (Intellagama lesueurii)

Carme Piza-Roca, Kasha Strickland, Nicola Kent, Celine H Frere and Jonathan Pruitt

Behavioral Ecology, 2019, vol. 30, issue 5, 1406-1415

Abstract: Numerous studies have observed kin-biased social associations in a variety of species. Many of these studies have focused on species exhibiting parental care, which may facilitate the transmission of the social environment from parents to offspring. This becomes problematic when disentangling whether kin-biased associations are driven by kin recognition, or are a product of transmission of the social environment during ontogeny, or a combination of both. Studying kin-biased associations in systems that lack parental care may aid in addressing this issue. Furthermore, when studying kin-biased social associations, it is important to differentiate whether these originate from preferential choice or occur randomly as a result of habitat use or limited dispersal. Here, we combined high-resolution single-nucleotide polymorphism data with a long-term behavioral data set of a reptile with no parental care to demonstrate that eastern water dragons (Intellagama lesueurii) bias their nonrandom social associations toward their kin. In particular, we found that although the overall social network was not linked to genetic relatedness, individuals associated with kin more than expected given availability in space and also biased social preferences toward kin. This result opens important opportunities for the study of kinship-driven associations without the confounding effect of vertical transmission of social environments. Furthermore, we present a robust multiple-step approach for determining whether kin-biased social associations are a result of active social decisions or random encounters resulting from habitat use and dispersal patterns. Animals are often observed biasing their social associations toward kin. In species that exhibit parental care, it is difficult to ascertain whether these associations may be, at least partly, socially transmitted, rather than formed on the basis of relatedness. Kin associations may also be driven merely by spatial proximity. By accounting for spatial patterns, we show that eastern water dragons, which lack parental care, bias their social associations toward kin most likely on the basis of relatedness.

Keywords: home range; inclusive fitness theory; kinship structure; next-generation sequencing; social associations (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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