Parent-Offspring Flashcards

1
Q

inclusive fitness (3)

A

relatedness self to:

  • sibling: 1/2
  • niece/nephew: 1/4
  • cousin: 1/8
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2
Q

Hamilton’s rule (3)

A
  • a gene that causes an individual to help another at a cost to itself should spread when C < B*r
  • C < B*r = cost to actor < benefit to recipient * relatedness of actor to recipient
  • an individual can gain “inclusive fitness” by helping genetic relatives
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3
Q

parent-offspring conflict (4)

A

asymmetrical relatedness between parents and offspring

  • offspring related to themselves by r = 1
  • parents related to offspring by r = 1/2
  • parents equally related to all offspring and should equalize investment
  • siblings related by 1 to themselves, 1/2 to siblings, and 1/4 to half-siblings
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4
Q

reasons for parent-offspring conflict (3)

A
  • there must be a cost to the parent providing more care
  • there must be a benefit to the offspring receiving care
  • there must be diminishing returns on investment
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5
Q

parent-offspring conflict: effects of diminishing returns of investment (2)

A
  • mother does better by switching care to second offspring (mom equally related to both offspring)
  • offspring 1 wants more investment for itself
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6
Q

parent-offspring conflict: conflict of interests (3)

A
  • each offspring wants more than its fair share of resources
  • each offspring ‘disagrees’ with its parent about the value of other offspring
  • offspring may perform costly behaviours (crying, tantrums) to manipulate parents and elicit extra care
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7
Q

parent-offspring conflict: types of conflict (3)

A
  • conflict over amount of investment
  • conflict over termination of investing
  • conflict over behaviours of offspring towards siblings and other relatives
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8
Q

parent-offspring conflict: conflict over amount of investment(4)

A
  • benefit to current offspring fitness have diminishing effects
  • cost of future offspring fitness to parent increase linearly
  • cost of future offspring fitness to current offspring increase at 1/2 the rate of the parent
  • result: offspring maximize fitness at a greater level of parental investment than is optimum for the parent
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9
Q

parent-offspring conflict: examples of maternal-embryo conflict (2)

A
  • conflict over implantation

- conflict over food supply

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10
Q

parent-offspring conflict: conflict over implantation (3)

A
  • mother abort embryos with chromosomal abnormalities
  • embryos produce a hormone to implant/maintain pregnancy
  • morning sickness might be a side effect
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11
Q

parent-offspring conflict: conflict over food supply (2)

A
  • embryos produce substance to increase food supply to the fetus by constricting mother’s arteries
  • leads to high blood pressure in the mother
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12
Q

parent-offspring conflict: prediction for conflict vs mating system (2)

A

conflict should be greater when offspring are sired by multiple fathers
- cost of losing any offspring is equal for parent (C)
- cost of losing a sibling is halved (1/2 C)
- cost of losing half-sibling is quartered (1/4 C)
result in greater investment in offspring that are less related to their siblings

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13
Q

parent-offspring conflict: conflict over termination of investment (3)

A
  • parent should end investment when B/C = 1, whereas offspring will demand investment until B/C = 1/2
  • parent and offspring stop investment at net fitness benefit peaks, but offspring has later peak
  • period of conflict: intervening period where offspring continues to demand investment
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14
Q

parent-offspring conflict: reflection of conflict of termination of investment (3)

A

attempts by the offspring to elicit more care than parent is prepared to give:

  • crying
  • regression (behaving younger than actual age)
  • temper tantrums
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15
Q

parent-offspring conflict: termination of conflict

- humans

A

in humans, culture plays a significant role in termination of conflict:

  • Bofi farmers wean children abruptly and children exhibit high levels of fussing and crying
  • Bofi foragers nurse children longer and children exhibit no marked signs of distress
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16
Q

parent-offspring conflict: conflict over behaviour to siblings and other relatives (2)

A
  • parents will encourage children to value their siblings more than children are naturally inclined to
  • parents will tend to punish conflict between siblings and reward cooperation
17
Q

how are conflicts resolved (2)

A
  • if mom has total control, she can do what is best for her and there is not really conflict
  • mothers have less than total control if they respond to signals from offspring`
18
Q

honest signally theory

A
  • benefit of signalling (more care) greater for individuals in poor condition than for individuals in good condition
  • honest signallers pay a cost, but get a sizeable benefit
  • cheaters experience net loos
19
Q

honest signalling theory: why does cheaters experience net loss (2)

A
  • the cost of signalling is high and the benefit of more care is low due to diminishing returns
  • they take resources away from siblings, lowering their own fitness
20
Q

why should a mother respond to offspring signalling (2)

  • benefit
  • possible cost
A
  • conflict is resolved as is best for mom during honest signalling because mother gets information about offspring condition
  • possible cost: cost to offspring to signal (energetic costs, predation risks)
21
Q

competitive escalation (2)

A
  • begging rate between siblings increases to match one another
  • does not necessarily reflect actual needs, but the competition to be heard