Patch depletion, niche structuring and the evolution of co-operative foraging
Authored by der Post Daniel J van, Dirk Semmann
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-11-335
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Many animals live in groups. One proposed reason is that
grouping allows cooperative food finding. Group foraging models suggest
that grouping could increase food finding rates, but that such group
processes could be evolutionarily unstable. These models assume discrete
food patches which are fully detectable. However, often animals may only
be able to perceive local parts of larger-scale environmental patterns.
We therefore use a spatial individual-based model where food patches are
aggregates of food items beyond the scale of individual perception. We
then study the evolution of foraging and grouping behavior in
environments with different resource distributions.
Results: Our results show that grouping can evolve to increase food
intake rates. Two kinds of grouping evolve: traveling pairs and
opportunistic grouping, where individuals only aggregate when feeding.
Grouping evolves because it allows individuals to better sense and
deplete patches. Such enhanced patch depletion is particularly apparent
on fragmented and partially depleted patches, which are especially
difficult for solitary foragers to deplete. Solitary foragers often
leave a patch prematurely because a whole patch cannot be observed
directly. In groups, individuals that are still eating allow other
individuals that inadvertently leave the patch, to return and continue
feeding. For this information sharing a grouping tendency is sufficient
and observing whether a neighbor is eating is not necessary. Grouping
therefore leads to a release from individual sensing constraints and a
shift in niche specialization, allowing individuals to better exploit
partially depleted patches.
Conclusions: The evolved group foraging can be seen as cooperative in
the sense that it leads to a mutually-beneficial synergy: together
individuals can achieve more than on their own. This cooperation exists
as a group-level process generated by the interaction between grouping
and the environment. Thus we reveal how such a synergy can originate in
evolution as a side-effect of grouping via multi-level selection. Here
there is no cooperative dilemma as individuals cannot avoid producing
information for their neighbors. This scenario may be a useful starting
point for studying the evolution of further social and cooperative
complexity.
Tags
Simulation
Distributions
Model
flocking
Group selection
information
Altruism
Fish schools
Size
Dictyostelium-discoideum