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Acts on variation in individual reproductive success |
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Acts on variation in the effects indiiduals have on their relative's reproductive success |
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Measured in terms of personal reproductive output |
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Measured in terms of genetic gains by helping relatives reproduce |
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The sum of direct and indirect fitness, and measures the total genetic contribution of an individual to the next generation = own offspring, corrected for r (.5)(direct fitness) + other young, corrected for r (indirect fitness) |
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Coefficient of relatedness |
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r Probability of an allele in one individual to be present in another b/c both individuals have inherited it from a recent common ancestor |
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Behavior that benefits the reproductive success of the recipient at some cost to the donor |
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The process that occurs when individuals differ in ways that affect their parental care or helping behavior, and thus the survival of their own offspring or the survival of nondescendant kin |
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Difference between kin selection and indirect selection |
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Kin selection also includes variation that affects an individual's parental care and the survival of its own offspring |
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number of common ancestors (or pathways) x 0.5^ number of generational links
e.g., Grandparent to grandchild: 1 ancestor, 2 generational links --> 1(0.5)^2=0.25=r
First cousins: 2 common ancestors (grandparents), 4 generational links (one from child to parent, two from parent to aunt, one from aunt to cousin)--> 2(0.5)^4=0.125=r |
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Based on the premis that individuals reproduce with unconscious goal of propagating alleles more successfully than other individuals
Altruism toward kin is advantageous when rbB>rcC
or: B (the additional offspring that the recipient gains from being helped) x r (r of donor to those offspring)
>
C (number of offspring lost/unborn by donor) x r(0.5)
e.g. help sister produce 3 extra offspring instead of 1 of your own:
3 x 0.25 > 1 x 0.5 --> yes |
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Hamilton emphasized that individuals can contribute genetically to future generations in what 2 ways? |
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1) Directly, through production of own offspring
2) Indirectly, through positive effects on reproductive success of their relatives |
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Primary versus secondary helpers in pied kingfishers |
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Primaries help mom and younger sibs
Secondaries help unrelated nesting pairs
Primaries demonstrate altruism can be adaptive (deliver almost as much food to young as does father)
Secondaries show helping need not be altruistic but may generate direct fitness benefits to helpers (don't deliver much food, so gains in first season are minimal compared to primaries, but in second season, benefit from increased chance of finding a mate and increased chance of survival to second season, so benefits outweigh those of primaries in second season)
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What must be the case in order for altruistic traits to be adaptive? |
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Inclusive fitness of altruistic individuals must be greater than it would be if those individuals had tried to reproduce personally |
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Should individuals always dole out altruism according to r? Why? |
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No. There may be asymmetries in reproductive value |
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Mechanisms for kin recognition |
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1) Preferences that develop as a result of association during ontogeny
2) "Mediated recognition" through a third individual
3) Phenotypic matching --> depends on strong correlation between phenotypic similarity and genotypic similarity |
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Kin recognition in colonial birds |
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Definition
Chick have more individually distinctive calls
Adults learn their chicks' calls faster and more accurately |
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Genetic mechanisms for kin recognition?
Learned mechanisms for kin recognition? |
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Phenotypic matching
Location (in nest/territory), Olfactory, auditory, or visual cues, prolonged social contact |
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Result of spending more time with siblings in spadefood tadpoles |
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Carnivorous/ cannibalistic ones spent less time with sibs than did herbivores |
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Tendencies of Belding's ground squirrels to call in response to predators?
What does this suggest? |
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Definition
Females w/ offspring or w/ only nondescendant kin as neighbors are more likely to call in response to predator than are females w/o relatives in neighborhood
This suggests both direct and indirect selection contribute to maintenance of alarm calling behavior in this species (supports parental care and altruism hypotheses respectively) |
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Term
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Definition
Major Histocompatibility complex: large genomic region that plays a major role in immune system, autoimmunity
Highly polymorphic (variable)
Proteins encoded by MHC expressed on surface of cell and display self and non-self antigens
MHC plays a role in mate selection, kin recognition via olfaction
Research on congenic mice suggests that individuals with same MHC treat each other as kin
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Do baboons seem to use phenotypic cues when investing in juveniles? |
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No. Seem to use behavioral ones (only 36% of juveniles w/ male caretakers had father as caretaker, but was usually mother's friend during infancy) |
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Example of sensory exploitation |
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Similar egg appearance and begging behavior in female and baby widowbirds to finches that they parasitize
Larger birds nesting as parasites at feeding advantage because parents tend to feed larger offspring better
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If vigorous begging has high payoff in terms of feeding quantities, why don't all warblers beg as vigorously as possible? |
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Perhaps not due to energy expenditure but due to avoiding damage to full sibs |
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Why do birds often accept parasite eggs? |
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Definition
Inability to distinguish own eggs or babies from parasites (similar looking widowbird eggs, similar sounding cuckoo calls)
Cost of abandoning nest, eggs already laid (If abandon own eggs by mistake or treat as froeign eggs, it is costly
Extortion by parasite |
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If the similar sounding horsfield's bronze-cuckoo:
1) Lays egg before fairy wren clutch...?
2) Laid after wrens have begun to incubate a complete clutch...?
3) Laid in the midst of partial clutch...? |
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Definition
1) host will build new nest over parasitized egg
2) host will abandon nest
3) Will often incubate all eggs |
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Why might warblers allow cowbirds to remain in nests? |
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Definition
Even though warblers are severely harmed by having baby cowbirds in nests, females w/0 several nest holes in territory often tolerate cowbird for lack of suitable alternative nest site
Tend to accept parasitized eggs near end of breeding season for fear of cost of difficulty to rear new breed |
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Parasitic cuckoo mother would come back and kill magpie eggs if mother magpie ejects cuckoo egg
Reproductive success in terms of # of fledgelings is often higher in those that accept parasitic egg
Best option is to remove egg and block off nest (experiment) so cowbirds cannot prey on nestlings |
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Functions of kin recognition |
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Cooperation
Inbreeding avoidance |
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Types of "kin" recognition:
Which are not favored by kin selection? |
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1) kin vs. non-kin
2) within kin class, different degrees of r
3) other individuals' kin (or close associates)
4) abstract kin classes (e.g. "uncle", "sister")
(3 and 4 not favored by kin selection)
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