Literature DB >> 12803893

From individual control to majority rule: extending transactional models of reproductive skew in animal societies.

Hudson Kern Reeve1, Robert L Jeanne.   

Abstract

Transactional concession models of social evolution explain the reproductive skew within groups by assuming that a dominant individual completely controls the allocation of reproduction to other group members. The models predict when the dominant will benefit from donating parcels of reproduction to other members in return for peaceful cooperation. Using linear programming methods, we present a 'majority-rules' model in which the summed actions of all society members, each with equal power, completely determine the reproductive share of any single member. The majority-rules model predicts that, despite the diffusion of power, a 'virtual dominant' (a dominant lacking special behavioural power) will emerge and that the reproductive skew will be exactly that predicted if the virtual dominant were to control completely the group's reproductive partitioning. The virtual dominant is the individual to which group members have the maximum average genetic relatedness. This result greatly broadens the applicability of transactional models of reproductive skew to social groups of any size, such as large-colony eusocial insects, and explains why queens in such colonies can achieve reproductive domination without any behavioural enforcement. Moreover, the majority-rules model unifies transactional-skew theory with models of worker policing and even generates a new theory for the cooperation among somatic cells in a multicellular organism.

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12803893      PMCID: PMC1691338          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2002.2253

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  1 in total

Review 1.  Tests of reproductive-skew models in social insects.

Authors:  H K Reeve; L Keller
Journal:  Annu Rev Entomol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 19.686

  1 in total
  4 in total

Review 1.  Eusociality: origin and consequences.

Authors:  Edward O Wilson; Bert Hölldobler
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-09-12       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Infanticide by subordinates influences reproductive sharing in cooperatively breeding meerkats.

Authors:  Andrew J Young; Tim Clutton-Brock
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2006-09-22       Impact factor: 3.703

3.  Fertility Signaling and Partitioning of Reproduction in the Ant Neoponera apicalis.

Authors:  Boris Yagound; Rémi Gouttefarde; Chloé Leroy; Rima Belibel; Christel Barbaud; Dominique Fresneau; Stéphane Chameron; Chantal Poteaux; Nicolas Châline
Journal:  J Chem Ecol       Date:  2015-05-28       Impact factor: 2.626

4.  Reproductive skew in cooperative breeding: Environmental variability, antagonistic selection, choice, and control.

Authors:  Peter Nonacs
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-09-04       Impact factor: 2.912

  4 in total

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