Supplementary material from "How social behaviour and life-history traits change with age and in the year prior to death in female yellow-bellied marmots"
Posted on 2021-02-11 - 01:04
Studies in natural populations are essential to understand the evolutionary ecology of senescence and terminal allocation. While there are an increasing number of studies investigating late-life variation in different life-history traits of wild populations, little is known about these patterns in social behaviour. We used long-term individual based data on yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventer) to quantify how affiliative social behaviours and different life-history traits vary with age and in the last year of life, and how patterns compare between the two. We found that some social behaviours and all life-history traits varied with age, whereas terminal last year of life effects were only observed in life-history traits. Our results imply that affiliative social behaviours do not act as a mechanism to adjust allocation among traits when close to death, and highlight the importance of adopting an integrative approach, studying late-life variation and senescence across multiple different traits, to allow the identification of potential trade-offs.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Ageing and sociality: why, when and how does sociality change ageing patterns?’.
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Kroeger, Svenja B.; Blumstein, Daniel T.; Martin, Julien G. A. (2021). Supplementary material from "How social behaviour and life-history traits change with age and in the year prior to death in female yellow-bellied marmots". The Royal Society. Collection. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5300838.v1