1. The evolution of eusociality: no risk‐return tradeoff but the ecology matters
- Author
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Hiroshi Toyoizumi and Jeremy Field
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Letter ,Opportunity cost ,Evolution of eusociality ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Hamilton's Rule ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,social behaviour ,Economics ,inheritance ,Animals ,Letters ,Selection, Genetic ,Social Behavior ,social evolution ,Productivity ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Stochastic game ,Inheritance (genetic algorithm) ,eusociality ,Bees ,wasps ,Hymenoptera ,Biological Evolution ,Eusociality ,bet‐hedging ,Social evolution - Abstract
The origin of eusociality in the Hymenoptera is a question of major interest. Theory has tended to focus on genetic relatedness, but ecology can be just as important a determinant of whether eusociality evolves. Using the model of Fu et al. (2015), we show how ecological assumptions critically affect the conclusions drawn. Fu et al. inferred that eusociality rarely evolves because it faces a fundamental ‘risk‐return tradeoff’. The intuitive logic was that worker production represents an opportunity cost because it delays realising a reproductive payoff. However, making empirically justified assumptions that (1) workers take over egg‐laying following queen death and (2) productivity increases gradually with each additional worker, we find that the risk‐return tradeoff disappears. We then survey Hymenoptera with more specialised morphological castes, and show how the interaction between two common features of eusociality – saturating birth rates and group size‐dependent helping decisions – can determine whether eusociality outperforms other strategies., Theories concerning the origin of eusociality in Hymenoptera have tended to focus on genetic relatedness, but ecology can be just as important. With realistic ecological assumptions, we show that eusociality does not face a previously postulated ‘risk‐return tradeoff’. We find that the interaction between two common features of eusociality – birth rates that saturate at large group sizes, and group‐size dependent helping decisions – can instead determine whether eusociality outperforms other strategies.
- Published
- 2019