The Evolution of Different Forms of Sociality: Behavioral Mechanisms and Eco-Evolutionary Feedback
Authored by Charlotte Hemelrijk, Rineke Verbrugge, der Post Daniel J van
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117027
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Different forms of sociality have evolved via unique evolutionary
trajectories. However, it remains unknown to what extent trajectories of
social evolution depend on the specific characteristics of different
species. Our approach to studying such trajectories is to use
evolutionary case-studies, so that we can investigate how grouping
co-evolves with a multitude of individual characteristics. Here we focus
on anti-predator vigilance and foraging. We use an individual-based
model, where behavioral mechanisms are specified, and costs and benefits
are not predefined. We show that evolutionary changes in grouping alter
selection pressures on vigilance, and vice versa. This eco-evolutionary
feedback generates an evolutionary progression from
``leader-follower{''} societies to ``fission-fusion{''} societies, where
cooperative vigilance in groups is maintained via a balance between
within-and between-group selection. Group-level selection is generated
from an assortment that arises spontaneously when vigilant and
non-vigilant foragers have different grouping tendencies. The
evolutionary maintenance of small groups, and cooperative vigilance in
those groups, is therefore achieved simultaneously. The evolutionary
phases, and the transitions between them, depend strongly on behavioral
mechanisms. Thus, integrating behavioral mechanisms and eco-evolutionary
feedback is critical for understanding what kinds of intermediate stages
are involved during the evolution of particular forms of sociality.
Tags
Cooperation
emergence
selfish herd
Model
Aggregation
Fish schools
Diet
Group-size
Brain
Vigilance