| Literature DB >> 24578587 |
Barbora Trubenová1, Reinmar Hager1.
Abstract
Social selection and indirect genetic effects (IGEs) are established concepts in both behavioural ecology and evolutionary genetics. While IGEs describe effects of an individual's genotype on phenotypes of social partners (and may thus affect their fitness indirectly), the concept of social selection assumes that a given phenotype in one individual affects the fitness of other individuals directly. Although different frameworks, both have been used to investigate the evolution of social traits, such as cooperative behaviour. Despite their similarities (both concepts consider interactions among individuals), they differ in the type of interaction. It remains unclear whether the two concepts make the same predictions about evolutionary trajectories or not. To address this question, we investigate four possible scenarios of social interactions and compare the effects of IGEs and social selection for trait evolution in a multi-trait multi-member model. We show that the two mechanisms can yield similar evolutionary outcomes and that both can create selection pressure at the group level. However, the effect of IGEs can be stronger due to the possibility of feedback loops. Finally, we demonstrate that IGEs, but not social selection gradients, may lead to differences in the direction of evolutionary response between genotypes and phenotypes.Entities:
Keywords: Direct genetic effect; Indirect genetic effect; Social interaction; Social selection
Year: 2013 PMID: 24578587 PMCID: PMC3929773 DOI: 10.1007/s11692-013-9252-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Biol ISSN: 0071-3260 Impact factor: 3.119
Fig. 1Different types of social interactions. Indirect genetic effects () describe effects of other genotypes on the phenotype of a focal individual, while describes direct genetic effects. Interactions between phenotypes are described by The social selection gradient β describes direct effects of phenotypes on fitness of conspecifics, while β denotes the non-social selection gradient. G represents genotype, P phenotypes and W absolute fitness of each individual
Symbols used in the model
| Symbol | Description |
|---|---|
|
| Column vector of individual genotype (phenotype) |
|
| Relative fitness of an individual |
|
| Column vector of environmental effects |
|
| Matrix mediating the translation of an individual’s own genotype into its phenotype |
|
| Square matrix of phenotypic influences; |
|
| Matrix of direct genetic effects |
|
| Matrix of indirect genetic effects |
|
| Non-social selection gradient, row vector |
|
| Social selection gradient, row vector |
|
| Number of interacting individuals in one group |
|
| Number of groups in a population |
|
| Individual and group index |
|
| Column vector of mean genotype (phenotype) of a particular group |
|
| Deviation of an individual’s genotype (phenotype) from mean genotypic values of the group it belongs to |
|
| Vector of mean genotypic (phenotypic) values across whole population, set to 0 |
|
| Inter-group genotypic variance-covariance matrix |
|
| Intra-group genotypic variance-covariance matrix |
Fig. 2a Distribution of genetic values in three different groups of 200 individuals, used in the following simulations (b–e). Comparison of all four scenarios: b No IGEs occur and no social selection gradient exists; c No IGEs occur but a social selection gradient exists (β = 0.05); d IGEs occur but no social selection gradient exists; e Both IGEs and social selection gradient exist Non-social selection is positive in all four scenarios (β = 1)
Fig. 3a–d IGEs and social selection gradient may change the direction of evolution: a Negative non-social selection gradient; b negative non-social selection, but positive social selection gradient present (β = − 1, β = 0.011); c negative non-social selection gradient, positive IGEs present ; d negative non-social selection gradient, both IGEs and social selection positive
Fig. 4Change in genotypic and phenotypic response to selection. a genotypic response to selection, b phenotypic response to selection. While the change in genotype is positive for any interaction strength in this graph, the phenotypic response to selection is negative for . The diamonds show results of the simulation (mean of 500 trials), the line gives the analytical solution