Summary
This paper discusses the relative position of cooperative polyandry among models for the evolution of both polyandry and cooperative breeding. Cooperative polyandry is described as the situation where more than one male and one female breed as a group with males sharing equally in copulations and the care of one set of young. Sequential and simultaneous polyandry are defined to show how they differ from cooperative polyandry. These systems generally are characterized by the care of only one parent for each set of young, a trait which is in sharp contrast to cooperative polyandry. An argument is made that the present models for the evolution of polyandry cannot be expanded to include the cooperatively polyandrous species. Instead, the cooperative traits of cooperative polyandry fit within the array of characteristics of cooperative (communal) breeding. General characteristics of all cooperative species (monogamous, promiscuous and polyandrous) are reviewed and possible reasons for the evolution of equal‐status males are discussed. A plea is made for the unification of evolutionary models dealing with mating systems and cooperative systems.
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