“…Recent research on Southern Pied Babblers Turdoides bicolor (hereafter “pied babblers”) has shown that larger group sizes do not buffer against the negative impacts of high temperatures or low rainfall on reproductive success ( Bourne et al, 2020c , 2020b , 2020a ; Bourne, Ridley, McKechnie, et al, 2021b ; reviewed in Ridley et al, 2021 ). Similarly, recent empirical studies have not detected a buffering effect of larger group size in Superb Starlings Lamprotornis superbus ( Guindre-Parker and Rubenstein 2020 ), Sociable Weavers Philetairus socius ( D’Amelio et al 2022 ), Greater Ani Crotophaga major ( Riehl and Smart 2022 ), Seychelles Warblers Acrocephalus sechellensis ( Borger et al 2022 ), or Meerkats Suricatta suricatta ( van de Ven, Fuller, et al 2020 ). However, there is empirical evidence in support of a buffering effect of larger group size in some studies, for example, in a concurrent study on Meerkats ( Groenewoud and Clutton-Brock 2021 ) and recent research on White-browed Sparrow-weavers Plocepasser mahali ( Capilla-Lasheras et al 2021 ).…”