“…Mole-rats within the genera Fukomys and Cryptomys show body size related changes in cooperative behaviour and individuals can vary widely in the frequency of burrowing behaviour (Bennett and Jarvis 1988, Bennett 1990, Burda 1990, Bennett 1992, Jarvis et al 1994, Spinks et al 1999, Scantlebury et al 2006). However, longitudinal studies of Damaraland mole-rats of known ages have shown that individuals do not trade-off investment in cooperative behaviours and that the general patterns of the distribution of cooperative behaviour across individuals are similar to those of naked mole-rats shown in this study (Zöttl et al 2016a, Thorley et al 2018, Zöttl et al 2018, Gilbert et al 2020). Evidence from field studies of other Fukomys species also supports the notion that the behavioural similarity of mole-rats societies with obligatorily eusocial insects has probably been overemphasized in the past and evidence for specialisation, divergent developmental trajectories or bimodal trait distributions across individuals are rare (Faulkes and Bennett 2016, Šklíba et al 2016, Zöttl et al 2016b, Van Daele et al 2019, Voigt et al 2019).…”