Why mussels stick together: spatial self-organization affects the evolution of cooperation
Authored by Franz J Weissing, Jager Monique de, de Koppel Johan van
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10682-017-9888-1
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Cooperation with neighbours may be crucial for the persistence of
populations in stressful environments. Yet, cooperation is often not
evolutionarily stable, since non-cooperative individuals can reap the
benefits of cooperation without having to pay the costs associated with
cooperation. Here we show that active aggregation leading to
self-organized spatial pattern formation can promote the evolution of
cooperativeness. To this end, we study the effect of movement strategies
on the evolution of cooperation in mussel beds. Mussels cooperate by
attaching themselves to neighbours via byssal threads, thereby providing
mutual protection. Using an individual-based model for mussel bed
formation, we first demonstrate that the spatial pattern and the
corresponding number of neighbours strongly depends on the movement
strategies of the mussels. With an evolutionary model, we then show that
this has important implications for the evolution of cooperation, since
the evolved level of cooperativeness (the number of byssus threads
produced) strongly depends on the number of neighbours and on the
harshness and variability of the environment. Our results suggest that
spatial aggregation, abundantly found in self-organized ecosystems, may
promote the evolution of cooperation.
Tags
Competition
Cooperation
movement
conflict
ecosystems
Facilitation
Spatial structure
Prisoners-dilemma
Plant-communities
Pattern-formation
Eco-evolutionary dynamics
Mussels
Nutrients
Mytilus
edulis
Multicellularity