The coevolution of juvenile play-fighting and adult competition
Authored by Camilla Cenni, Tim W Fawcett
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/eth.12732
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://onlinelibrary-wiley-com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1111%2Feth.12732&file=eth12732-sup-0001-AppendixS1.cpp
Abstract
Although play-fighting is widespread among juvenile mammals, its
adaptive significance remains unclear. It has been proposed that play is
beneficial for developing skills to improve success in adult contests
(motor-training hypothesis), but the links between juvenile
play-fighting and adult aggression are complex and not well understood.
In this theoretical study, we investigate the coevolution between
juvenile play-fighting and adult aggression using evolutionary computer
simulations. We consider a simple life history with two sequential
stages: a juvenile phase in which individuals play-fight with other
juveniles to develop their fighting skills; and an adult phase in which
individuals engage in potentially aggressive contests over access to
resources and ultimately mating opportunities, leading to reproductive
success. The simulations track genetic evolution in key traits affecting
adult contests, such as the level of aggression, as well as juvenile
investment in play-fighting, capturing the coevolutionary feedbacks
between juvenile and adult decisions. We find that coevolution leads to
one of two outcomes: a high-play, high-aggression situation with highly
aggressive adult contests preceded by a prolonged period of juvenile
play-fighting to improve fighting ability, or a low-play, low-aggression
situation in which adult contests are resolved without fighting and
there is minimal investment in play-fighting before individuals mature.
Which of these outcomes is favoured depends on the mortality costs and
on the type of societal structure: societies with strong reproductive
skew, favouring monopolization of resources, show high levels of adult
aggression and high investment in juvenile play-fighting, whereas
societies with low reproductive skew have both low adult aggression and
low levels of play-fighting. A review of empirical evidence,
particularly in the primate genus Macaca, highlights some limitations of
our model and suggests that other, complementary functional explanations
are needed to account for the full range of competitive and cooperative
forms of play-fighting. Our study illustrates the power of evolutionary
simulations to shed light on the long-standing puzzle of animal play.
Tags
Individual-based model
Evolution
behavior
patterns
Societies
Tolerance
Hypothesis
Macaques
Social play
Egalitarian-despotic
Evolutionary simulations
Motor-training hypothesis
Play-fighting
Macaca-tonkeana
Fascicularis