Romeo and Juliet roles for banded mongooses

Report this content

Mongooses take life-threatening risks to mate with partners from rival group

Embargoed until 00.01 Friday 3 July:

Mongooses take life-threatening risks to mate with partners from rival groups

3 July 2015: Banded mongooses take extraordinary risks to ensure that they find the right mate.

Female banded mongooses risk their lives to mate with rivals during pack ‘warfare’ and both males and females have also learned to discriminate between relatives and non-relatives to avoid inbreeding even when mating within their own social group.

Dr Hazel Nichols from Liverpool John Moores University, found that 18% of wild banded mongoose pups are fathered by males from rival packs. 

Banded mongooses are found living in stable social groups across Central and Eastern Africa. They are highly social, with most individuals remaining in their natal pack surrounded by relatives for their whole lives.

Dr Nichols explains her findings: “These pups are less likely to be inbred, are heavier and have higher survival chances than their within-pack counterparts.  However, their mothers risk a lot to mate with extra-pack males; aggressive encounters between packs account for 20% of pup deaths and 12% of adult deaths.”

“Banded mongooses aren’t the only animals that fight with rival packs. Humans, for example often engage in warfare. However banded mongooses are unusual because a lot of mating occurs during these fights, even though it is a dangerous time to decide to mate with one of your rivals!”

 Dr Nichols studies these animals as part of a 20 year project, led by Professor Michael Cant  from the University of Exeter. 

 Dr Jennifer Sanderson, from the University of Exeter, who co-authored the study said:

“The most exciting thing we found is that females are more likely to mate with males from rival packs if they are surrounded by unsuitable mates - such as their brothers and uncles - in their own pack. When this happens, they are much more likely to take the risk of mating with a male from another pack.”

‘Adjustment of costly extra-group paternity according to inbreeding risk in a cooperative mammal’ by Dr Hazel Nichols, Professor Michael Cant, and Dr Jennifer Sanderson is published in the journal Behavioral Ecology.

http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/  

Interviews: H.J.Nichols@ljmu.ac.uk

Media

Media

Quotes

These pups are less likely to be inbred, are heavier and have higher survival chances than their within-pack counterparts. However, their mothers risk a lot to mate with extra-pack males; aggressive encounters between packs account for 20% of pup deaths and 12% of adult deaths. Banded mongooses aren’t the only animals that fight with rival packs. Humans, for example often engage in warfare. However banded mongooses are unusual because a lot of mating occurs during these fights, even though it is a dangerous time to decide to mate with one of your rivals!
Dr Hazel Nichols