Transcript CH14L1

The evolution of social behavior: Why do social species exist?
Disadvantages of living in social groups:
Increased competition for food/resources
Increased attraction of predators
Increased parasite loads
Increased rate of disease
Increased rate of EPC
Social subordination
Reproductive interference
Increased
competition for
food/resources
Social
subordination
Fieldfare. Turdus pilaris.
Neolamprologus pulcher
Mutualism
Nesting relationships
The advantage of social living
•Territory defense/maintenance
•Predator defense
•Offspring care
•Mating effort
Dully colored males are likely allowed to nest
near dominant males because
•Lowered risk of cuckoldry to dominant male
•.75
•Easier for dominant to perform EPC
Dull males gain opportunity to hold higher quality
territory in exchange for increased cuckoldry
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Mutualism: cooperative behavior with payoff
Long-tailed manikins
•Males work in pairs to attract females
•Dominant male receives all mating benefits
•Subordinate becomes dominant when the other male dies/disappears
Shared mating effort
Reciprocal altruism: One organism provides a benefit to another in the
expectation of future reciprocation
•Assumes that cheaters can be identified/punished
•Assumes that the giver incurs a short-term personal cost
•Assumes that receivers are not preferentially related to givers
Meerkats: Reciprocal altruists?
If true: meerkats should:
•Share sentinel duties equally
•Sentinels should be at greater risk
Prisoners dilemma: Why reciprocal altruism is very rare in nature
In survival terms, catching a cheater is low… when your dead!
Conditions under which altruistic behavior should could occur:
•When there is opportunity for repeated opportunities to
give/receive by the same unrelated players: tit for tat
•When players are related
How altruistic traits could spread in a population
Direct selection: altruistic acts that directly influences your personal fitness
Indirect selection: altruistic acts that directly influences fitness of close
relatives
Kin selection: altruistic acts directed at both offspring and closely related
individuals
Belding’s Ground squirrels
Belding’s Ground squirrels:
•Alarm callers are far more likely to be
captured than alarm call receivers
•Females are twice as likely to give alarm calls