5-manipulation + spite Flashcards

1
Q

what is manipulation?

A

an individual may be tricked or coerced into behaving cooperatively so what appears altruistic is actually manipulation

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2
Q

why is all behaviour likely to involve some degree of manipulation?

A

individuals try to selfishly maximise their own fitness at the expense of others

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3
Q

list 3 species that exhibit manipulative behaviour

A
  • european starling
  • cuckoo finch
  • tawny flanked prinia
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4
Q

what is interspecific brood parasitism?

A

parasites exploit parental care of hosts to trick them to be altruistic

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5
Q

what indicates hunger in cuckoo parasites?

A

begging calls and brightly coloured gapes

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6
Q

who and when studied how cuckoos persuade host parents to care for their young

A

kilner et al 1999

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7
Q

what rate will host reed warblers feed a single cuckoo chick at compared to reed warbler chicks?

A

feed one cuckoo chick at a similar rate to 4 reed warbler chicks

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8
Q

in an experiments increasing the sound begging component how did parent reed warblers respond?

A

respond to a louder noise or bigger gape

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9
Q

how many reed warbler chick begging calls do cuckoo chicks mimic?

A

> 4

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10
Q

why are the gapes of cuckoo chicks at a disadvantage in terms of signal? - what makes up for this>

A

smaller than host brood

- begging calls: beg at higher rate than 4 reed warblers so parents feed more frequently

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11
Q

what can and cant cuckoos increase?

A

can increase call rate but not gape area

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12
Q

what do cuckoo chicks exploit?

A

behavioural rules of the parents as they initiate auditory and visual cues

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13
Q

what is the cost of begging at a high rate?

A

attracts predators

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14
Q

what is the brood parasitism example for horsfields hawk-cuckoo? (2)

A
  • when hungry wave wings so yellow patch under its wing acts as a second gape so it doesn’t have to beg as loud to signal hunger
  • only display false gape when more hungry
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15
Q

what did canestrari et al 2014 discover about great spotted cuckoo as an example of parasitism becoming mutualism?

A
  • benefit hosts by emitting foul secretion that repels predators, increasing chance of host brood fledging
  • parasitised groups had higher success rates
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16
Q

describe how there is a continuum of symbiotic interactions

A

coop interactions are unstable and turn into exploitation when one individual takes advantage of social partner

17
Q

what does intra and inter specific conflict have power in generating?

A

adaptation to manipulate others to be altruistic towards them

18
Q

describe the example discovered by Hojo et al 2015 for mutualism becoming parasitism (7)

A
  • lycaenid butterfly and ants
  • provide secretion that ants like meaning more likely to attend the larvae
  • fed by ants in nest
  • protect larvae from predators in return can feed from nectary organ of butterfly
  • butterfly manipulates ants behaviour
  • feeding ant can induce ants to spend less time walking so they defend more
  • aggression induced in ants aiding in their defense as manipulative drug in secretion decreases dopamine in ants brain
19
Q

in terms of hamilton’s rule when can spiteful behaviour evolve?

A

rB > C

relatedness must be negative

20
Q

how is r negative?

A
  • relatedness coefficient involves sharing genes identical by descent
  • relatedness measured relative to population as a whole
21
Q

when may a spiteful gene spread through a population?

A

if it harms individuals not carrying the gene therefore benefitting other carriers of the spiteful gene

22
Q

what does spite directed at non relatives benefit?

A

relatives

23
Q

give 5 facts about polyembryonic parasitoid wasps discovered by Giron et al 2004 and Gardner et al 2007

A
  • M and F egg laid into moth larva
  • clonal F and M larvae occupy single host
  • egg divides asexually producing thousands of larvae
  • some F develop at sterile soldiers, attacking other larvae
  • soldier (F) relatedness to F is 1 as clonal and relatedness to M is 0.25
24
Q

give 4 reasons why the behaviour in polyembryonic parasitoid wasps can be considered spiteful

A
  • behaviour costly for sterile soldiers as give up ability to reproduce
  • behaviour targets unrelated individuals/distant kin such as M
  • close kin benefit from harmful behaviour, eliminating M larvae, increasing prob F larvae can emerge as adults
  • F comp for resource provided by moth host reduced
25
Q

in terms of kin what kind of mechanism is harder to develop?

A

to discover distant kin

26
Q

give 3 reasons as to why spite is rare in nature

A
  • spiteful act to non kin incurs cost to actor
  • may benefit relative but also other unrelated individuals : so actor may derive net cost from spite
  • hard to recognise small number of close kin but harder to recognise individuals with negative relatedness : risk that spiteful behaviour directed to distant kin as well as those of negative r
27
Q

what provides the framework to understand the evolution of social behaviours?

A

hamilton’s concept of IFT and social interaction table

28
Q

what is the default of NS?

A

selfish behaviour

29
Q

why is spite rare?

A

unusual conditions required

30
Q

altruism arising by what is likely to be selected for?

A

manipulation

31
Q

describe Gardner and West 2006 findings for chemical warfare in bacteria (4) + 3 examples (3)

A
  • some bacteria explode into antibacterial toxins to kill competitors
  • closest relatives spared due to genetic linkage between toxin gene and gene giving immunity to toxin
  • only negatively related cells killed
  • health affected as if bacteria at war with each other they are less able to sustain infection
  • e.g. p.luminsecens
  • e.g. parasitoid wasp: wolbachia causes M to spitefully sterilise F
  • e.g. suicidal soldiers in parasitoid wasps
32
Q

what is greenbeard spite and an example of where it occurs (3)

A
  • if r to victims of spite - then spite favoured by kin selection
  • gene encoding distinctive trait/green beard genetically associated with spite gene then this marker can be used to guide relations
  • in red fire ants where workers with spiteful gene kill prospective queens who don’t share gene: ensures surviving queens carry the gene