L19 - Cooperative behaviour and kin selection Flashcards
What is cooperative behaviour?
A behaviour in which one organism pays a cost and another receives a benefit (in terms of fitness)
Why is cooperative behaviour a problem?
Natural selection favours genes that increase individual fitness so selfish behaviours should dominate
What are the 2 solutions to cooperative behaviour?
Direct benefits - reproductive success of the cooperator is increased
Indirect benefits - reproductive success of individual sharing the cooperators genes is increased
What is direct reciprocity?
When individuals continue to help each other, increases the fitness of the cooperating individual and the recipient of the behaviour (but requires repeated interactions) - mutually beneficial relationship
What is an example of direct reciprocity?
Between cleaner wrasse and larger fish - wrasse gets a meal and larger fish gets parasites removed
What is altruistic behaviour?
Behaviours that benefit the recipient but not the cooperator
Give an example of an altruistic behaviour
Vampire bats blood sharing:
- will regurgitate blood to individual not successful in finding food
- blood sharing is typically between ‘buddy’ pairs (= repeated interactions) or relatives
- individuals cooperate on the first interaction and in subsequent interactions copy the behaviour of the other individual
What is indirect reciprocity?
Apparent altruistic behaviours where the benefits come later
What are reputational benefits?
When an altruistic behaviour pays off in the long term because the reputation of the cooperator has gone up
What is kin selection?
A process by which traits are favoured because of their beneficial effects on the fitness of relatives
What are the indirect fitness benefits of kin selection?
Helping your relatives allows cooperators to spread their genes without having to necessarily reproduce themselves
What is Hamiltons rule?
Cooperative genes should increase in frequency when the benefits (B) of cooperating are greater than the costs (C), depending on the level of relatedness (r):
So rB - C > 0
In salamanders, what is an example of a different treatment of kin?
Salamanders perform cannibalism but:
- cannibalism occurred later in kin associations
- therefore, some form of kin recognition exists
In guppies, what is an example of a different treatment of kin?
Full sibs spent more time shoaling together and swam closer together than half sibs
How do animals recognise kin?
- environmental cues: familiarity or shared environment
- phenotype and self-referent matching
- “green-beard” effects