Abstract.
The tendency to aggregate with conspecifics is a common type of social behavior, and interspecific differences in degree of sociality may indicate that evolutionary changes in sociality have been shaped by past selection pressures. A pre-requisite for such evolutionary change is that the behavior in question has an additive genetic basis. I investigated parent-offspring resemblance in two characteristics of sociality (colony size and nearest neighbor distance) in the semi-colonial barn swallow Hirundo rustica. Heritability estimates of these phenotypic characters were statistically significant. Offspring that were transferred to foster nests as part of brood size manipulation or cross-fostering experiments resembled their original parents more than their foster parents with respect to sociality. There was little evidence of phenotypic characteristics of mothers being significantly related to colony size or nearest neighbor distance of their offspring. Maintenance of genetic variation in sociality in this species may be related to the facts that the relationship between reproductive success and colony size differs among years, and that individuals differing in phenotypic quality have different optimal colony sizes.
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Møller, A. Parent-offspring resemblance in degree of sociality in a passerine bird. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 51, 276–281 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-001-0438-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-001-0438-y