Altruism (Siva-Jothy) Flashcards

1
Q

Altruistic Behaviour

A

Altruistic behaviour: Behaviour that benefits other individuals at a cost to the altruistic individual.
There is a reduction of fitness to the altruistic individual.

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2
Q

Examples of altruistic behaviour

A

Honeybees

  • Guard bees sit at the entrance to the hive, if you approach it will come out and sting you, therefore killing itself.
  • It is giving up reproduction to benefit all other bees in the population.
  • All bees give up reproduction except for the queen bee, instead helping her to reproduce.

Vampire bats
-If they have a blood meal and others haven’t, they will regurgitate part of their meal to feed others.

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3
Q

How could altruistic behaviour evolve?

A
  1. The behaviour is not really altruistic?
  2. Altruism is reciprocated at a later time?
  3. Adaptations have evolved for “the good of the species”?
  4. Adaptations have evolved for the good of the gene.
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4
Q

The behaviour is not really altruistic?

A

Monkeys
One doesn’t feed and looks for predators, then screams if there are predators spotted, to warn the other monkeys feeding, therefore thought it was altruism.
- Might not be altruism and could be because by screaming and many monkeys running, it reduces the risk of one monkey getting attacked and eaten.
-However, the monkey still goes without feeding properly, so it is altruistic behaviour.

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5
Q

Altruism is reciprocated at a later time?

A

The altruistic behaviours balance out.
-E.g. vampire bats regurgitating food for another when it gets hungry, but the role is reversed when the first altruistic bat goes hungry.

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6
Q

Adaptations have evolved for the “good of the species”?

A

-Sterile worker castes
-Alarm calls
-Ritualised fighting
-Senescence
Such adaptations could not have evolved by individual selection. Nothing evolves for the good of the species

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7
Q

Group selection (problems) (“good of the species”)

A

If selection worked in a group, mutations would quickly affect the whole group.
-The turnover rate of a group is always faster than that of the individual, so there would be an invasion of non-altruistic mutation.

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8
Q

Adaptations have evolved for the good of the gene?

A

Altruistic behaviour occurs at the level of the individual. Behaviour is selfish at the level of the gene.
It enhances the fitness of individual genes
-It increases the frequency of a gene in the population, due to Kin selection

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9
Q

Kin selection

A
  • Altruism will evolve when rb > c (Hamilton’s Rule)
  • c = cost of altruism
  • b = benefit to recipient
  • r = coefficient of relatedness (% of genes shares)
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10
Q

% of genes shares (coefficient of relatedness)

A

Parent - child = 50%

Grandparent - child = 25%

Full siblings = 50%

Half-siblings = 25%

Cousins = 12.5%

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11
Q

With an altruistic act..

A

rb > c

  • If c increased, less genes are passed to own offspring
  • If rb increases, more genes are passed through kin’s offspring
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12
Q

Helper’s at the nest (kin selection)

A

Seychelles warbler
Male brings food to female and offspring. There is sometimes another male helper who brings food as well.
-He is altruistic, as he is not reproducing with the female.
-The helpers are often sons of the parents chicks, they don’t have the ability to reproduce, but are increasing the success of reproduction of the mother and father.

rb > c

  • c = number of chicks helper would have if it bred
  • b = extra chicks the pair raises
  • r = relatedness to pair (calculated by DNA fingerprinting).
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