Davies, NG and Gardner, A. 2018. Data from: Monogamy promotes altruistic sterility in insect societies. [Online]. Dryad. Available from: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gt8b5
Davies, NG and Gardner, A. Data from: Monogamy promotes altruistic sterility in insect societies [Internet]. Dryad; 2018. Available from: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gt8b5
Davies, NG and Gardner, A (2018). Data from: Monogamy promotes altruistic sterility in insect societies. [Data Collection]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gt8b5
Description
Monogamy is associated with sibling-directed altruism in multiple animal taxa, including insects, birds, and mammals. Inclusive-fitness theory readily explains this pattern by identifying high relatedness as a promoter of altruism. In keeping with this prediction, monogamy should promote the evolution of voluntary sterility in insect societies if sterile workers make for better helpers. However, a recent mathematical population-genetics analysis failed to identify a consistent effect of monogamy on voluntary worker sterility. Here, we revisit that analysis. First, we relax genetic assumptions, considering not only alleles of extreme effect—encoding either no sterility or complete sterility—but also alleles with intermediate effects on worker sterility. Second, we broaden the stability analysis—which focused on the invasibility of populations where either all workers are fully-sterile or all workers are fully-reproductive—to identify where intermediate pure or mixed evolutionarily-stable states may occur. Third, we consider a broader range of demographically-explicit ecological scenarios relevant to altruistic worker non-reproduction and to the evolution of eusociality more generally. We find that, in the absence of genetic constraints, monogamy always promotes altruistic worker sterility and may inhibit spiteful worker sterility. Our extended analysis demonstrates that an exact population-genetics approach strongly supports the prediction of inclusive-fitness theory that monogamy promotes sib-directed altruism in social insects.
Keywords
Data capture method | Unknown |
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Date (Date published in a 3rd party system) | 18 April 2018 |
Language(s) of written materials | English |
Data Creators | Davies, NG and Gardner, A |
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LSHTM Faculty/Department | Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology |
Participating Institutions | London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom, University of St Andrews, Scotland |
Date Deposited | 10 Oct 2019 11:10 |
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Last Modified | 08 Jul 2021 12:51 |
Publisher | Dryad |