Data from: Evolutionary drivers of group foraging: a new framework for investigating variance in food intake and reproduction
A proposed fundamental driver of group living is more reliable, predictable foraging and reproduction, i.e. reduced variance in food intake and reproductive output. However, existing theories on variance reduction in group foraging are simplistic, refer to variance at the level of individuals and gr...
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Zusammenfassung: | A proposed fundamental driver of group living is more reliable,
predictable foraging and reproduction, i.e. reduced variance in food
intake and reproductive output. However, existing theories on variance
reduction in group foraging are simplistic, refer to variance at the level
of individuals and groups without linking the two, and do not spell out
crucial underlying assumptions. We provide a new, widely applicable
framework for identifying when variance reduction conveys fitness benefits
of group foraging in a wide range of organisms. We discuss critical
limitations of established theories, the Central Limit Theorem and
Risk-Sensitive Foraging Theory applied to group foraging, and incorporate
them into our framework while addressing the confusion over the levels of
variance and identifying previously unaddressed assumptions. Through a
field study on colonial spiders, Cyrtophora citricola, we demonstrate the
importance of evaluating the level of food sharing as a critical first
step, previously overlooked in the literature. We conclude that variance
reduction provides selective advantages only under narrow conditions and
does not provide a universal benefit to group foraging as previously
proposed. Our framework provides an important tool for identifying
evolutionary drivers of group foraging and understanding the role of
fitness variance in the evolution of group living. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.g5p9h7k |