The spatial spread of altruism versus the evolutionary response of egoists
Authored by JC Koella
Date Published: 2000
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2000.1239
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Abstract
Several recent models have shown that altruism can spread in viscous
populations, i.e. in spatially structured populations within which
individuals interact only with their immediate neighbours and disperse
only over short distances. I first confirm this result with an
individual-based model of a viscous population, where an individual can
vary its level of investment into a behaviour that is beneficial to its
neighbours but costly to itself. Two distinct classes of individuals
emerge: egoists with no or very little investment into altruism, and
altruists with a high level of investment; intermediate levels of
altruism are not maintained. I then extend the model to investigate the
consequences of letting interaction and dispersal distances evolve along
with altruism. Altruists maintain short distances, while the egoists
respond to the spread of altruism by increasing their interaction and
dispersal distances. This allows the egoistic individuals to be
maintained in the population at a high frequency. Furthermore, the
coevolution of investment into altruism and interaction distance can
lead to a stable spatial pattern, where stripes of altruists (with local
interactions) alternate with stripes of egoists (with far-reaching
interactions). Perhaps most importantly, this approach shows that the
ease with which altruism spreads in viscous populations is maintained
despite countermeasures evolved by egoists.
Tags
Cooperation
Dynamics
Coexistence
investment
Inclusive fitness
Viscous populations
Continuous prisoners-dilemma