Hot droughts compromise interannual survival across all group sizes in a cooperatively breeding bird
AbstractIncreasingly harsh and unpredictable climate regimes are affecting animal populations around the world as climate change advances. One relatively unexplored aspect of species vulnerability to climate change is whether and to what extent responses to environmental stressors might be mitigated by variation in group size in social species. We used a 15-year dataset for a cooperatively-breeding bird, the southern pied babbler Turdoides bicolor, to determine the impact of temperature, rainfall, and group size on body mass change and interannual survival in both juveniles and adults. Hot and dry conditions were associated with reduced juvenile growth, mass loss in adults, and compromised survival between years in both juveniles (−86%) and adults (−60%). Individuals across all group sizes experienced similar effects of climatic conditions. Larger group sizes may not buffer individual group members against the impacts of hot and dry conditions, which are expected to increase in frequency and severity in future.