| Literature DB >> 20942969 |
Adam L Cronin1, Thibaud Monnin.
Abstract
Intra-specific competition occurs in all animal species and can lead to escalated conflict. Overt fighting entails the risk of injury or death, and is usually avoided through the use of conventions or pre-fight assessments. However, overt fighting can be expected when value of the contest outweighs the value of the future, as contestants have little or nothing to lose. In these situations, respect for conventions and asymmetries between contestants can break down, and overt fighting becomes more likely (the desperado effect). Such conditions can arise in contests between queens over colony ownership in social insects, because the value of inheriting a colony of potentially thousands of helpers is huge and queens may have very limited alternative reproductive options. However, in social species the balance of possible outcomes may be influenced by inclusive fitness, as contestants are often relatives. Here we present a simple model based on social insects, which demonstrates that not fighting can be selectively advantageous when there is a risk posed by fighting to inclusive fitness, even when not fighting is likely to result in death. If contestants are related, a loser can still gain indirect fitness through the winner, whereas fighting introduces a risk that both queens will die and thereby obtain zero inclusive fitness. When relatedness is high and fighting poses a risk of all contestants dying, it can be advantageous to cede the contest and be killed, rather than risk everything by fighting.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20942969 PMCID: PMC2965136 DOI: 10.1186/1742-9994-7-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Zool ISSN: 1742-9994 Impact factor: 3.172
Abbreviations and variables used in the model.
| Variable | Range | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | na | The contestant holding the advantage in some form of asymmetry, which will thus win the contest if no overt fighting occurs. |
| Q2 | na | The opponent, who will lose the contest unless it fights Q1. |
| na | Fitness value of the contest (ie: lifetime fitness of the queen that inherits the colony). | |
| na | Fitness value of the future (ie: outside of the contest). | |
| 0 to 1 | The probability of Q1 winning an overt fight, here expressed as a linear function of relative fighting ability: | |
| 0 to 1 | The probability that fighting will result in the death of both queens, based on the mortality index and relative fighting ability, such that | |
| 0 to 1 | Genetic relatedness between contestants. | |
| -1 to 1 | Relative fighting ability of Q1. When | |
| 0 to 1 | Mortality index. A factor based on the lethality of unrestrained combat for the species in question, expressed as a probability that a fight between contestants of equal fighting ability will lead to the death of both contestants. | |
| α | ≥0 | A factor defining the shape of the curve describing the effect of relative fighting ability on the chance of mortality of both queens (Fig. |
Figure 1Conditions favouring not fighting by Q2 for contestants of equal fighting ability. Critical values of d for which not fighting (above the line) or fighting (below the line) is favoured, for all values of r, from equation {4}. When fighting abilities are equal (a = ½), the decision whether to fight or not is a function of d and r. This figure indicates that Q2 increasingly favours not fighting for increasing values of r and d. When contestants are full sisters (r = 0.75), Q2 will not fight unless the risk of both queens dying is very low (d < 0.143).
Figure 2Conditions favouring not fighting by Q2. Critical values of d for which not fighting (above the lines) or fighting (below the lines) is favoured by Q2 for various values of f, from equation {4}. Each line represents a value of relatedness (r = 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75 and 0.9, with r = 0.75 (full sisters) indicated by a thick line). For clone queens (r = 1), critical values are always 0, and not fighting is always favoured. Not fighting is favoured when relatedness is high or when Q1 is a better fighter.
Figure 3Mortality risk curve for α = 5, and corresponding conditions favouring not fighting by Q2. Effect of relative fighting ability of Q1 (f) on diminishing the probability that overt fighting leads to the death of both contestants following d = m e-αf². The inset graph shows the distribution of the probability of both queens dying for m = 1 and α = 5. The risk of mortality of both queens is restricted to a smaller range of f values, and is close to zero for extremely biased fighting ability. The main figure shows that when the risk to inclusive fitness decreases with increasing asymmetry in fighting ability, Q2 is more likely to fight, particularly when it is a relatively strong fighter. Not fighting remains the preferred strategy when fighting represents a risk to inclusive fitness.
Examples of contests between relatives in a potential 'desperado' context in social insects.
| Species | Contestants | Reason for contest | Relatedness to competitors | Overt reciprocal fighting? | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Queens | Colony inheritance during requeening | High (0.75) | N | [ | ||
| Queens | Colony inheritance during requeening or fission | Low (polyandry) to high (parthenogenesis) | Y | [ | ||
| Ants | Males | Mating opportunities | Low (polygyny) | Y | [ | |
| Males | Mating opportunities | Low (polygyny) | Y | [ | ||
| Queens | Colony inheritance during requeening or fission | Low (polyandry) | Y | [ | ||
| Bees | Queens | Normal colony cycle | Moderate (mother - daughter) to High (full-sisters) | N (workers kill new queens quickly) | [ | |
| Queens | Colony inheritance during colony cycle | Moderate? | Y (mother and daughter) | [ | ||
In most instances relatedness is lower than in A. senilis, which may explain the prevalence of fighting reported in other species. The transitory presence of multiple related queens arises in monogynous social insects during preparation for colony fission, queen replacement, and as part of the normal colony cycle in stingless bees (continuous rearing). Male-male contests arise when mating occurs in the natal nest.