Research into the desert creatures - which live in groups with a dominant breeding pair and many adult helpers - shows that the alpha female can flourish when it maintains the sole right to breed.
The study shows how this way of life, also found in many animals such as ants and bees, can prove effective despite its sinister side.
Dominant meerkats control breeding within their group through violence. They banish any other females who reproduce, and kill their grandchildren, to ensure plentiful resources for the alpha pair's pups.
During this time, dominant females were less aggressive towards helpers and foraged more, gaining more weight and having bigger pups.
Also Read
The female helper meerkats experienced less violence than usual from the alpha female, and provided more care and food for the pups.
The study, published in Nature Communications, was carried out by the Universities of Edinburgh, Cambridge, Exeter and Pretoria with the Kalahari Meerkat Project in South Africa.
"The meerkat way of life is a paradox, in which alpha females will attack their daughters, banish them from the group and infanticise their offspring," said Dr Matt Bell, School of Biological Sciences, the University of Edinburgh.