Volatile social environments can favour investments in quality over quantity of social relationships

Archive ouverte

Aubier, Thomas, G | Kokko, Hanna

Edité par CCSD ; Royal Society, The -

International audience. Cooperation does not occur in a vacuum: interactions develop over time in social groups that undergo demographic changes. Intuition suggests that stable social environments favour developing few but strong reciprocal relationships (a ‘focused' strategy), while volatile social environments favour the opposite: more but weaker social relationships (a ‘diversifying' strategy). We model reciprocal investments under a quality–quantity trade-off for social relationships. We find that volatility, counterintuitively, can favour a focused strategy. This result becomes explicable through applying the theory of antagonistic pleiotropy, originally developed for senescence, to social life. Diversifying strategies show superior performance later in life, but with costs paid at young ages, while the social network is slowly being built. Under volatile environments, many individuals die before reaching sufficiently old ages to reap the benefits. Social strategies that do well early in life are then favoured: a focused strategy leads individuals to form their first few social bonds quickly and to make strong use of existing bonds. Our model highlights the importance of pleiotropy and population age structure for the evolution of cooperative strategies and other social traits, and shows that it is not sufficient to reflect on the fate of survivors only, when evaluating the benefits of social strategies.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Positive density dependence acting on mortality can help maintain species-rich communities

Archive ouverte | Aubier, Thomas, G | CCSD

International audience. Conspecific negative density dependence is ubiquitous and has long been recognized as an important factor favoring the coexistence of competing species at local scale. By contrast, a positive...

Coevolution of male and female mate choice can destabilize reproductive isolation

Archive ouverte | Aubier, Thomas, G | CCSD

International audience. Sexual interactions play an important role in the evolution of reproductive isolation, with important consequences for speciation. Theoretical studies have focused on the evolution of mate pr...

Digest: Evolutionary rescue following the introduction of a pathogen

Archive ouverte | Aubier, Thomas, G | CCSD

International audience. To what extent can adaptive evolution rescue a population from extinction following the introduction of a pathogen? Searle and Christie (2021) show how evolutionary rescues in host-pathogen s...

Chargement des enrichissements...