2-inclusive fitness Flashcards
what did Darwin discover about bee pollination of orchids and what did this lead to?
mutualistic interaction, must be a mutual benefit
- FAMILY LEVEL SELECTION: selection can be applied to the family level as well as individual
who + when came up with:
“survival of the fittest”?
“nature vs nurture”?
- what did these ideas lead to?
Spencer 1864
Galton
- social darwinism
what is social darwinism?
theory that individuals, groups and people are subject to the same darwinian laws of NS as plants and animals
how did Kropotkin challenge social darwinism?
- but what didn’t his argument provide?
argued evolutionary emphasis on coop behaviour instead of competition in darwinian sense
- no evolutionary mechanism as to why coop important
what was RA Fisher the founder of? + who else
NEO-DARWINIAN MODERN SYNTHESIS
- brought together darwinian thinking/NS, mendelian genetics, population genetics
+ JBS Haldane
what did neo-darwinian modern synthesis consider and why was this actually unimportant?
indirect/family level effects but not important compared to individual reproductive effects
under neo-darwinian modern synthesis what are traits favoured by NS?
those that enhance individual fitness
what did WD Hamilton notice that led to his discovery of the inclusive fitness theory + when?
social interactions + potential for evo theory of altruism + explanation for coop
1964
define inclusive fitness theory
“personal fitness that is expressed in production of adult offspring”
- fitness not exposed to harms/benefits of environment
a gene can increase transmission to the next generation by increasing the fitness of what?
- how does this relate to inclusive fitness?
- individuals it is in (DIRECT)
- individuals with copies of that gene/neighbours fitness (INDIRECT)
- DIRECT + INDIRECT
what types of interactions can inclusive fitness apply to, given that it is general?
positive + negative interactions (selfish/spite)
according to Abbott et al 2011- what is inclusive fitness successful in understanding?
behavioural phenomena such as:
- sex allocation
- selfish genetic elements
- parasite virulence
- conflict resolution
- spite
- sociality evolution
what is hamilton’s table of social interactions?
- actor effect +, recipient effect +: mutually beneficial
- A+ R-: selfish
- A- R+: altruistic
- A- R-: spiteful
why is cooperative behaviour selected for?
its beneficial effect on the recipient
what are 2 components of mutualistic cooperation + what is it?
provides immediate or delayed benefit to actors + recipients fitness
- reciprocity
- mutualism
what are 2 components of altruistic cooperation + what is it?
cooperation is costly to fitness of actor
- manipulation
- kin selection
in practice which is harder to measure: inclusive fitness or personal fitness?
inclusive
what is hamilton’s rule and what can it be used to understand?
whether a social trait is adaptive or not
rb>c
r= relatedness between actor and recipient
b= fitness benefit to actor
c= fitness cost to actor
according to Krakauer 2005- why do subordinate males bother joining dominants?
(use male r=0.42, dominant benefit b=6.1, subordinate cost c=0.9)
rb>c (0.42X6.1)= 2.562 c =0.9 rb is > c cost of helping is outweighed by kin selected benefit
what should be measured to tackle the difficulty of measuring fitness? ()
- offspring productivity
- productivity snapshot rather than lifetime (single season, reproductive attempt, offspring condition)
- fitness in terms of survival over discrete time interval
- energy budget, food intake
what are the 6 major transitions in the evolution of life on earth?
- chromosomes
- eukaryotes
- sex
- multicellularity
- social groups
- human society/language
according to Bourke 2011 what does each major evolutionary transition involve and so what can the transitions be explained by?
cooperation
so social evolution theory can explain transitions using the inclusive fitness theory logic
to test for the origin of multicellularity what was ratcliff et al 2012 experiment on unicellular yeast? (2)
- what did this show?
- 60 episodes of selection to select for aggregated yeast cells/multicellularity
- multicellular cluster form by clonal adhesion (cells clones of each other so high r)
- showed relatedness important in the emergence of multicellular traits
what are 2 signals of multicellular traits?
- deferred reproduction
- division of labour/apoptosis
what was Fisher et al 2013 comparative analysis for the origin of multicellularity? (6)
- compared multicellular form in clonal (r=1) and non clonal taxa (r<1)
- across tree of life all non clonal multi organisms are facultative
- majority of clonal show obligate multicellularity
- more diverse cell types in clonal organisms
- sterility more common in clonal
- cell type diversity and presence of sterile cells associated with clonality as predicted by IFT
what is the cooperative transition between unicellular and multicellular organisms influenced by? + what is this determined by?
relatedness
- determined by group formation
what does Nowack et al 2010 believe about IFT?
it is of little value in the natural world and does not provide biological insight
what does Abbott et al 2011 argue against Nowacks assumptions of IFT?
- it is useful and has explained sex ratio variance, adaptive variation in behaviour, when + why individuals make mistakes, eusocial insect behaviour