Title: Evolutionary Analysis 4/e
1 Kin Selection and Social Behavior
2I. Motivation
- Cooperative behaviors are widespread.
- Why?
3Genetically related female banded mongooses live
and breed in groups, and care for each other's
young
4 , -
Actor
Recipient
5II. Theory of Altruism
- An individuals survivorship and reproduction
relative to other individuals in the population
(Direct Fitness) - Hamiltons Rule (1964)
- Inclusive fitness
- Direct fitness indirect fitness
- Kin selection natural selection favoring the
indirect component of fitness - (Benefit x relatedness) Cost gt 0 Br gt C r gt
C/B - Benefit to recipient and cost to altruist
- Relatedness probability that homolgous alleles
in 2 individuals are identical by descent
6Indirect Fitness through a Relative
Computing relatedness with pedigrees
The arrows describe paths by which genes can be
identical by descent
7III. Evidence
Black-tailed prairie dogs give more alarm calls
when kin are nearby
8Male black-tailed prairie dogs change their alarm
calling behavior when their living situation
changes
5 males
9Helping Behavior in Birds White-fronted
bee-eaters
10In bee-eaters, helpers assist close relatives
Fitness gains due to helping
11Kin-selected discrimination in cannibalistic
tadpoles and salamanders
Benefit
12IV. Special case of Sociality True or
Eusociality 1. overlap in
generations between parents and offspring
2. cooperative brood care 3.
specialized castes of nonreproductive individuals
13Haplodiploidy produces unusual coefficients of
relationship
14Haplo-diploidy and Sister-Sister relationship
Sisters on average share ½ genes through
mother all of their genes through father (1/2
1)/2 ¾ Or ¼ ½ 3/4
15phylogeny of the hymenoptera
Origins of complex nesting behaviour
16In paper wasps, the success of female coalitions
varies
17Naked mole-rats have highly inbred colonies
18Naked mole-rat queens preferentially shove
nonrelatives
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20V. Siblicide and Parent-Offspring Conflict
Masked boobies
Blue-footed boobies
Older sib sometimes pushes sib from nest
Older sib always pushes sib from nest
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22VI. Reciprocal Altruism
Vampire bats This photo shows a group of vampire
bats roosting in a hollow tree
Cooperative behavior among non kin
23Also fed nest mates that had fed them
24Conclusion
- Cooperative behaviors are widespread
- Inclusive fitness
- (B x r) C gt 0
- Haplo-diploidy
- Siblicide
- Reciprocal altruism (Tit for Tat)
- Other interesting topics P-O conflict, sex ratio
evolution, greenbeard alleles
25VII. Parent-offspring conflict
Weaning conflict
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27Parent-offspring conflict results from changes in
the costs and benefits of parental care and
asymmetries in relationship
Full Sib
half-sib
Parent should stop investing below 1, and
offspring will stop harrassing parent at ½, or ¼,
respectively
28Bee-eaters recruit helpers who are younger and
closely related