9: maths in behaviour Flashcards

1
Q

what theory did W.D.Hamilton come up with, when and what was said about how social behaviour evolves?

A

inclusive fitness theory
1964
evolves so the individual values his neighbours fitness against his own

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2
Q

what are each of the component parts of hamilton’s rule and when is the behaviour favoured?

A

c= cost to actor of social behaviour + fitness is reduced
b= benefit to recipient + fitness increased
r= genetic relatedness between actor and recipient
c < br

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3
Q

in terms of r, genetic relatedness, it is looking at how many what are shared?

A

alleles

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4
Q

what is r for:

a) siblings/offspring
b) aunts and uncles
c) cousins

A

a) 0.5
b) 0.25
c) 0.125

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5
Q

what is c and b for each situation?

a) give food to recipient
b) steal food from recipient
c) swim past recipient

A

a) c: + b: -
b) c: - b: -
c) c: 0 b: 0

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6
Q

when is giving food to a recipient only favoured by NS?

A

if received by kin so r is +ve

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7
Q

when is stealing food from a recipient only favoured by NS?

A

if actor steals from non kin r=0

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8
Q

if food is given to a recipient (1 loss and 3 gain) what is the behaviour favoured by and is hamilton’s rule satisfied if r=0.5?

A

high relatedness

1 < 3r so the rule is satisfied as 1 < 1.5

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9
Q

if a recipient is cannibalised (-1 gain food and -10 die) what is the behaviour favoured by and is hamilton’s rule satisfied?

A

low relatedness
-1 < -10r
not satisfied as -1 < -5

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10
Q

how can cannibalism be considered a social action?

A

directed to members of the same species in the environment

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11
Q

in tiger salamanders when are groups more likely to develop into cannibals?

A
  • many conspecifics
  • variation in larval size
  • mostly unrelated individuals
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12
Q

when was game theory first developed and what did John Maynard smith do in 1970s to do with it?

A

1940s

applied it to animal behaviour

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13
Q

in terms of sex ratios within game theory in general what is it better to produce?

A

an even sex ratio of daughters and sons

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14
Q

if more sons are being produced what is it better to produce?

A

more daughters so more grand offspring

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15
Q

what is an evolutionarily stable strategy, ESS?

A
  • even sex ratio
  • cant be invaded by another strategy
  • nash equilibrium: beneficial to also produce even sex ratio if others are doing so
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16
Q

in terms of number of mates and offspring how does an even sex ratio population compare to a female biased population?

A
  • even: 1 mate and n offspring

- female biased: 2 mates and 2n offspring

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17
Q

what do many animals such as humans have to as a proximate cause to determine sex and give an even sex ratio?

A

genetic mechanism such as XY chromosome

18
Q

how do seychelle warblers determine the sex of their brood?

A

chromosomal determination and females adjust the ratio based on territory quality

19
Q

how can hymenoptera females decide the sex of her offspring?

A

choosing whether to release sperm from storage organ after egg is laid to fertilise it or not

20
Q

what is the honeybee conflict between mother queen and daughter workers over sex ratio?

A

workers cause female biased sex allocation ratio by killing male larvae and queen resists by laying fewer female eggs

21
Q

in a male biased population if the daughter is producing more offspring than the son what should be done?

A

overproduce daughters to drive sex ratio back to even 1:1

22
Q

at an even sex ratio what do sons and daughters give?

A

equal fitness returns

23
Q

what did John Maynard Smith notice some contests take place between?

A

paired opponents such as if both competing for a resource

24
Q

what are the 2 pairwise contests John Maynard smith looked at?

A
  • hawk dove game

- hawk dove bourgeois game

25
Q

in the hawk dove game what is the behaviour like for the hawk and dove?

A

hawk: never shares, always fights
dove: shares, retreats in fight

26
Q

in the hawk dove game what are the pay-offs in the matrix?

A

value of resource =v

cost of fighting to loser = c

27
Q

what is the pay off matrix in the hawk dove game when each is the focal individual:

a) hawk
b) dove

A

a) vs hawk= (v-c)/2
vs dove = v
b) vs hawk = 0
vs dove = v/2

28
Q

what are the costs like in the hawk dove game

A
  • hawk always wins but pays fighting cost

- dove never fights so no cost but shares so some pay off

29
Q

what happens if the dove is common and the hawk is rare?

A
  • hawk invades if v > v/2

- hawk has higher payoff than dove

30
Q

what happens if the hawk is common and the dove is rare?

A
  • dove invades if 0 > (v-c)/2

- invades if c > v

31
Q

in the hawk dove game what is the case if both the dove and hawk can invade and what is the case if only one of these are true?

A
  • mixed ESS where both strategies are present and proportions depend on values of c and v
  • pure ESS of hawks
32
Q

in the hawk dove game what are each of these alternate roles?

a) retaliator
b) prober retaliator
c) bully

A

a) plays dove first then fights back
b) occasionally fights but will back down
c) always fights but will back down

33
Q

what is the behaviour of the bourgeois?

A

will play as hawk when resident and dove when intruder

34
Q

with bourgeois what does it do to hawk and dove populations in the resident wins scenario?

A
  • dove always worse off as v>0

- can invade and be resistant to hawk if v < c

35
Q

what is the bourgeois example for speckled wood butterfly? (3)

A
  • play hawk when resident and dove if intruder
  • if resident of one patch moved to another both residents will play hawk in escalated contest
  • resident male will always win an encounter for sun patch over a non resident
36
Q

when looking at rock paper scissors game no single strategy ESS is possible so what are the 2 possible outcomes?

A
  • 1/3 of each strategy

- cyclical dynamics

37
Q

what is cyclical dynamics?

A

one strategy invades another and is then invaded by a third which in turn is invaded by the first

38
Q

list the 3 male mating strategies/morphs described by John maynard smith for side blotched lizards as a rock paper scissors game example

A
  • large territory holders: orange throat
  • sneakers: yellow striped throat
  • defenders: blue throat
39
Q

what are features of the orange throat large territory holding lizards? (4)

A
  • aggressive
  • dominant
  • attack other coloured males but not orange as much
  • hold large territory with many females
40
Q

what are features of the yellow striped throat sneaker lizards? (5)

A
  • mimic females
  • enter large territories to sneak mating
  • dishonest signal
  • can fool oranges
  • hunted by blue males
41
Q

what are features of the blue throat defender lizards? (3)

A
  • defend small territory with 1 female
  • can detect sneakers and hunt them
  • oranges defeat them in attack
42
Q

what sort of dynamic is the side blotched lizard example and what happens each year?

A

cyclical

proportion of each morph changes and one dominates each year