380 likes | 389 Views
A few points. Your quizzes: Your Exam I Still on April 22 Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, and 11 (9 chapters) Extra Credit: 8 and 9 Leaves 14 chapters. Chapter 12: Family, Society, and Evolution. Robert E. Ricklefs The Economy of Nature, Fifth Edition. Background.
E N D
A few points • Your quizzes: • Your Exam I • Still on April 22 • Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, and 11 (9 chapters) • Extra Credit: 8 and 9 • Leaves 14 chapters
Chapter 12: Family, Society, and Evolution Robert E. Ricklefs The Economy of Nature, Fifth Edition
Background • The behavior and, indirectly, life histories and ecological relationships of an individual are under strong selective pressure from: • the social and family environment • relationship to members of both sexes • For example, fitnesses of the male morphs of the side-blotched lizard are dependent on frequencies of other male morphs in the population: • these morphs interact through complex social interactions that determine reproductive success
Background • Individuals interact with other members of the same species throughout their lives. • Each individual must perceive the behaviors of others and make appropriate responses: • some interactions pay benefits for cooperative behaviors because of a common interest: • interactions with kin (common evolutionary heritage) • interactions with mates (common interest in success of offspring)
Cooperation or Competition? • All interactions between members of the same species delicately balance conflicting tendencies of cooperation and competition, altruism and selfishness. • Such a balance is evident in humans, the most social of animals: • society is sustained by role specialization • social life balances cooperation and conflict
What is Social Behavior? • Social behavior includes all interactions among individuals of the same species. • These interactions range from cooperation to antagonism. • Consequences of these interactions for individuals are substantial, with effects on individual fitness.
Territoriality • Any area defended by an individual against the intrusion of others may be regarded as a territory: • territories vary enormously in size and permanence • animals are likely to maintain territories if: • the resource is defensible • the rewards outweigh the cost of defense
Dominance Hierarchies • Defense of territories may not always be practical. • In absence of territories, the outcome of conflict may be establishment of social rank. • When individuals order themselves by social rank or status, the result is a dominance hierarchy. • Social rank and occupancy of space may be directly related, as low-ranking individuals may be relegated to the periphery of a flock. (positive feedback loop)
To fight or not to fight? • Establishment of territories or social rank depends on the outcome of contests between individuals. • In any confrontation, participants must weigh: • costs of fighting and benefits of winning • likely outcome of the contest • Determining optimal behavior is complicated by each individual’s lack of knowledge about the behavior of the other participant.
Optimal Behaviors and Game Theory • Game theoryanalyzes the outcomes of behavioral decisions when these outcomes depend on the behavior of other players. • Game theory predicts the individual’s behavior based the best estimates of: • the other contestant’s response • the reward for winning
Advantages and Disadvantages of Living in Groups • True social groups result from a purposeful joining together of (unrelated) individuals. • Living in groups results in benefits and costs to flocking birds, like the European goldfinch: • benefit is less individual vigilance • cost is the more rapid depletion of resources, forcing the flock to move more frequently
Natural selection balances the costs and benefits of behaviors. • Toward a classification of behaviors: • Most social interactions can be broken into acts performed by: • donors - individuals initiating behaviors • recipients - individuals toward whom behaviors are directed • Each act has the potential to affect the reproductive success of both the donor and the recipient of the behavior
A Classification of Behaviors • Four combinations of fitness increments to donor and recipient lead to the following classification: • cooperation (benefits donor, selected for) • selfishness (benefits donor, selected for) • spitefulness (benefits no one, selected against) • altruism (benefits recipient at cost to donor) • Altruism, among these, is most problematic: • selfish behaviors would be expected to prevail • yet altruistic acts are common in social species
Kin selection favors altruistic behaviors. • When an individual directs a behavior toward a sibling or other close relative, it influences the fitness of an individual with whom it shares more genes than it does with an individual drawn at random from the population. • This special outcome of social behavior among relatives is called kin selection.
Identity by Descent • The likelihood that two individuals share copies of any particular gene is the probability of identity by descent, which varies by degree of relationship: • also called the coefficient of relationship • full sibs have a 50% probability of sharing any gene • parents and children also have 50% probability of sharing any gene, etc. • Two cousins probability of 12.5% (1/8)
A Model for Assessing Altruistic Behavior • Total fitness of a gene responsible for a particular behavior is its inclusive fitness: • contribution to fitness of donor plus product of change in fitness to recipient X, weighted by coefficient of relationship • a gene promoting altruistic behavior will have a positive inclusive fitness if: C < Br where: C = cost to donor B = benefit to recipient r = coefficient of relationship
Implications of the Model • Genes for altruistic behaviors should increase in the population when: • behaviors have low cost to donor • behaviors are restricted to close relatives • Opportunities for evolution of altruistic behaviors do exist: • individuals often associate in family groups • individuals can often assess their relatedness
Is guarding altruistic? • Insert figure 12.10
Cooperation among Individuals in Extended Families • Complex relationships among extended human families are familiar to us: • often such families include only one child-producing pair • a portion of the behavior of non-nuclear members of the extended family are directed toward well-being of these related children
Cooperation in Bee-Eaters • Extended families of bee-eaters exhibit cooperative and competitive behaviors: • selfish and selfless acts are directed toward others in direct accordance with the degree of relationship • inclusive fitness is the appropriate measure of selection on social behavior: • altruistic behaviors can evolve among close relatives by kin selection • Figure 12.13
Cooperation Among Unrelated Individuals • Social groups can form to promote mutual self-interest of unrelated individuals. • Can groups of unrelated individuals move toward true cooperation?
Game Theory and Cooperation • The paradox: • conflict can reduce the fitness of selfish individuals below that of cooperative individuals, so cooperative behaviors should evolve among unrelated individuals • but, when most of a social group consists of cooperative individuals, a selfish individual can achieve high fitness by cheating
The Hawk-Dove Game • The hawk-dove game (prisoner’s dilemma): • a hawk always competes over resources, taking all the rewards when it wins: • 2 hawks always fight. Result – on average – one gets half the reward so the reward is ½ the average benefit minus the cost of fighting (1/2 B-C) • Hawk vs dove: hawk gets it all • the hawk strategy is not the best overall because hawks incur costs of conflict • a dove never competes over resources, sharing resources with other doves, yielding them to hawks: • When 2 doves meet – they share w/o cost: 1/2B • the dove strategy is the best overall because resources are shared without costs of conflict
Hawks invade societies of doves. • Dove behavior is not an evolutionarily stable strategy: • a population of doves is easily invaded (from an evolutionary perspective) by hawkish behavior: • a hawk in a population of doves reaps twice the rewards of doves • a population of hawks is resistant to invasion by dove behavior, however
Can hawks and doves coexist? • When the benefit is less than twice the cost of conflict, dove behavior can invade a population of hawks. • In this situation the proportion of hawks is one-half the ratio of the benefit to cost. • Persistence of hawks and doves in this case is an evolutionarily stable mixed strategy. • Each type of behavior can increase in frequency when it is rare – thereby keeping both in the game
Parents and offspring may come into conflict. • Offspring consume parental resources, but this is desirable from the perspective of the parents: when progeny thrive, so do the parents’ genes. • Parents and offspring come into conflict when accumulation of resources by one offspring reduces the overall fecundity of its parents.
Parents and offspring have different goals. • Offspring try to resolve conflicts over resources in favor of their own reproductive success. • For parents, a balanced approach to current and future reproduction is favored: • resources allocated to one offspring cannot be allocated to another • resources allocated to current offspring reduce those that can be allocated to future offspring
When does parent-offspring conflict occur? • As young mature, the benefit to them of parental care declines. • Because of coefficients of relationship among parents, an offspring, and that offspring’s sibs: • when the benefit to parent of providing additional care falls below the cost of this care for future reproduction, the parent should cease providing care • offspring should continue to request additional care until the benefit to parent of providing that care falls below twice the cost of this care for future reproduction
Eusocial Insect Societies • Social insects exhibit the extreme of family living, in which most offspring forego reproduction and help their parents raise siblings. • This situation raises evolutionary questions: • how did such societies evolve? • how can natural selection produce individuals with no individual fitness?
What is eusociality? • Eusociality entails: • several adults living together in groups • overlapping generations • cooperation in nest building and brood care • reproductive dominance by one or a few individuals, including the presence of sterile castes • Eusociality is limited among insects to Isoptera (termites) and Hymenoptera (ants, bees, wasps), and to one mammal, the naked mole rat.
How did eusociality evolve? • Potential sequence of evolutionary events: • parents have a lengthened period of care for developing brood (parents guard brood or provision larvae) • parents live and continue to produce eggs after first progeny emerge • offspring are in a position to help raise subsequent broods • when progeny remain with their mother after adulthood, the way is open to relinquishing reproductive function to support mother’s
Organization of Insect Societies • Insect societies are dominated by one or a few egg-laying females, queens: • queens of ants, bees, and wasps mate once and store sufficient sperm to produce a lifetime of offspring • Nonreproductive progeny of the queen: • gather food and care for their developing brothers and sisters, some of which become sexually mature and leave the nest to mate • Specific details vary somewhat for termite colonies, which are headed by a king and queen.
Coefficients of Genetic Relationship in Hymenoptera • Hymenoptera have a haplodiploid sex-determining mechanism: • females (workers) develop from fertilized eggs • males (drones) develop from unfertilized eggs • Coefficients of genetic relationship are skewed: • female worker to female sibling is 0.75 • female worker to male sibling is 0.25 • queen to son or daughter is 0.5 • Sex ratios are female-biased, 3:1.
Summary • All behaviors have costs and benefits to the individual and to others affected by the behavior, with special consequences for close relatives. • Behavior is influenced by genetic factors and is thus subject to evolutionary modification by natural selection. • Interactions within a social setting lead to important evolutionary consequences when interests of individuals conflict or coincide.
A few things extra • Do the quiz for chapter 12. Due Friday (you get a bit extra time) • Spend some time reading the ‘more on the web’ section in this chapter • Homework: what can an understanding of ant genetics and behavior provide for us humans? • Email me your thoughts by Friday midnight.